Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference Software Release 4.0.7 Americas Headquarters Cisco Systems, Inc. 170 West Tasman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-1706 USA http://www.cisco.
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CONTENTS Preface CHAPTER 1 xi Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Using Command Modes 1-2 Organization of the WAAS CLI 1-2 Using EXEC Mode 1-3 Using Global Configuration Mode 1-3 Using the Interface Configuration Mode Using ACL Configuration Modes 1-5 Command Modes Summary 1-5 Device Mode 1-6 Using Command-Line Processing Checking Command Syntax 1-7 1-9 1-9 Saving Configuration Changes 1-9 Navigating the WAAS Directories on a WAE Directory Descriptions 1-11 Managing WAAS Files Per Device 2 Cisc
Contents copy disk 3-14 copy ftp 3-15 copy http 3-19 copy running-config 3-23 copy startup-config 3-24 copy sysreport 3-25 copy system-status copy tech-support copy tftp 3-31 debug 3-32 delfile 3-38 deltree 3-39 3-40 disable disk 3-42 3-43 dnslookup enable exit 3-47 3-48 3-49 find-pattern help 3-50 3-52 install 3-53 less 3-54 lls 3-55 ls 3-57 mkdir 3-59 mkfile 3-60 ntpdate 3-61 ping 3-62 pwd 3-63 reload 3-64 rename 3-65 restore 3-66 rmdir scp 3-28 3-
Contents script 3-73 setup 3-74 show aaa accounting show adapter 3-77 show alarms show arp 3-75 3-78 3-81 show authentication 3-82 show auto-register 3-84 show banner 3-85 show bypass 3-86 show cdp 3-87 show clock show cms 3-93 3-95 show debugging 3-98 show device-mode show disks 3-101 show flash 3-105 show hardware 3-99 3-106 show hosts 3-109 show inetd 3-110 show interface 3-111 show inventory 3-116 show ip access-list 3-117 show ip routes 3-119 show kerberos 3
Contents show smb-conf show snmp 3-139 3-141 show ssh 3-147 show standby 3-148 show startup-config 3-150 show statistics authentication 3-152 show statistics content-distribution-network show statistics dre 3-154 show statistics dre connection show statistics dre peer 3-161 show statistics icmp 3-162 show statistics ip 3-156 3-158 show statistics epm 3-164 show statistics netstat 3-167 show statistics radius 3-168 show statistics services show statistics snmp 3-170 3-171 show st
Contents show transaction-logging show user 3-209 3-210 show users administrative show version 3-213 show wccp 3-214 show windows-domain shutdown 3-225 3-228 tcpdump telnet 3-229 3-230 terminal 3-231 tethereal 3-232 traceroute 3-234 transaction-log type 3-235 3-236 type-tail 3-237 undebug 3-239 wafs whoami 3-244 3-246 windows-domain write 3-220 3-222 snmp trigger ssh 3-211 3-247 3-250 Configuration Mode Commands (config) aaa accounting (config) adapter 3-252 3-256 (conf
Contents (config) device mode (config) disk 3-286 (config) end 3-288 3-284 (config) exec-timeout (config) exit 3-290 (config) help 3-291 (config) hostname (config) inetd 3-293 3-294 (config) interface (config) ip 3-295 3-302 (config) ip access-list (config) kerberos (config) kernel (config) line (config) ntp 3-305 3-308 3-310 3-311 (config) logging (config) no 3-289 3-312 3-316 3-318 (config) policy-engine application classifier 3-319 (config) policy-engine application map adaptor
Contents (config) smb-conf 3-348 (config) snmp-server access-list 3-352 (config) snmp-server community 3-353 (config) snmp-server contact 3-355 (config) snmp-server enable traps (config) snmp-server group 3-356 3-359 (config) snmp-server host 3-361 (config) snmp-server location (config) snmp-server mib 3-363 3-364 (config) snmp-server notify inform (config) snmp-server user 3-367 (config) snmp-server view 3-369 (config) sshd 3-370 (config) ssh-key-generate (config) tacacs (config) tcp
Contents (config) windows-domain 3-413 Interface Configuration Mode Commands (config-if) autosense 3-416 (config-if) bandwidth 3-417 (config-if) cdp 3-419 (config-if) exit 3-420 (config-if) failover timeout 3-421 (config-if) full-duplex 3-422 (config-if) half-duplex 3-423 (config-if) inline (config-if) ip 3-424 3-426 (config-if) ip access-group (config-if) mtu (config-if) no 3-415 3-428 3-429 3-430 (config-if) shutdown (config-if) standby 3-432 3-433 Standard ACL Configuration Mode
Preface This preface describes who should read the Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference, how it is organized, and its document conventions.
Preface • The WAE Device Manager GUI allows you to remotely configure, manage, and monitor an individual WAE through your browser. In many cases, the same device settings can be found in both the WAE Device Manager GUI and the WAAS Central Manager GUI. For this reason, we strongly recommend that you always configure a WAE from the WAAS Central Manager GUI whenever possible.
Preface Document Conventions This command reference uses these basic conventions to represent text and table information: Convention Description boldface font Commands, keywords, and button names are in boldface. italic font Variables for which you supply values are in italics. Directory names and filenames are also in italics. screen font Terminal sessions and information the system displays are printed in screen font.
Preface • Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference (this manual) • Regulatory Compliance and Safety Information for the Cisco Content Networking Product Series • Cisco Wide Area Application Engine 511 and 611 Hardware Installation Guide • Cisco Wide Area Application Engine 512 and 612 Hardware Installation Guide • Cisco Wide Area Application Engine 7326 Hardware Installation Guide • Cisco Network Modules Hardware Installation Guide • Using the Print Utilities to Troubleshoot and
C H A P T E R 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface The Cisco WAAS software command-line interface (CLI) is used in combination with the WAAS Manager GUI to configure, monitor, and maintain a WAAS device. The CLI on a WAAS device can be accessed directly through the console port of an attached PC or remotely through a Telnet session on a PC running terminal emulation software. Note The WAAS software runs on the WAE-511, WAE-512, WAE-611, WAE-612, WAE-7326. WAE-7341, and WAE-7371.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Using Command Modes Using Command Modes The CLI for WAAS software is similar to the CLI for Cisco IOS software. Like Cisco IOS software, the WAAS CLI is organized into different command and configuration modes. Each mode provides access to a specific set of commands.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Using Command Modes Using EXEC Mode Use the EXEC mode for setting, viewing, and testing system operations. In general, the user EXEC commands allow you to connect to remote devices, change terminal line settings on a temporary basis, perform basic tests, and list system information. The EXEC mode is divided into two access levels: user and privileged.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Using Command Modes Commands entered in global configuration mode update the running configuration file as soon as they are entered. These changes are not saved into the startup configuration file until you enter the copy running-config startup-config EXEC mode command. See the “Saving Configuration Changes” section on page 1-9. Once the configuration is saved, it is maintained across WAE reboots.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Using Command Modes Using ACL Configuration Modes From global configuration mode, you can enter the standard and extended ACL configuration modes. • To work with a standard access list, enter the ip access-list standard command from the global configuration mode prompt. The CLI enters a configuration mode in which all subsequent commands apply to the current access list.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Using Command Modes Device Mode The WAAS software provides the ability to specify the device mode of a WAAS device. In a WAAS network, you must deploy a WAAS device in one of the following device modes: • Central Manager mode—Mode that the WAAS Central Manager device needs to use. • Application accelerator mode—Mode for a WAAS Accelerator (that is a Core WAE or Edge WAE) that is running the WAAS software.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Using Command-Line Processing Using Command-Line Processing Cisco WAAS software commands are not case sensitive. You can abbreviate commands and parameters as long as they contain enough letters to be different from any other currently available commands or parameters. You can also scroll through the last 20 commands stored in the history buffer and enter or edit the command at the prompt.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Checking Command Syntax WAE# clock ? read-calendar set update-calendar Read the calendar and update system clock Set the time and date Update the calendar with system clock The help output shows that the set keyword is required. Check the syntax for entering the time. WAE# clock set ? <0-23>: Current Time (hh:mm:ss) Enter the current time in 24-hour format with hours, minutes, and seconds separated by colons. WAE# clock set 13:32:00 % Incomplete command.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Using the no Form of Commands Using the no Form of Commands Almost every configuration command has a no form. The no form of a command is generally used to disable a feature or function, but it can also be used to set the feature or function to its default values. Use the command without the no keyword to reenable a disabled feature or to enable a feature that is disabled by default.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Navigating the WAAS Directories on a WAE Table 1-3 WAAS Navigation Commands Command Description cd [directory-name] Change Directory—Moves you from the current directory to the specified directory in the WAAS tree. If no directory is specified, cd takes you up one directory. deltree directory-name Remove Directory Tree—Deletes the specified directory and all subdirectories and files without displaying a warning message to you.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Navigating the WAAS Directories on a WAE The following example displays only the detailed information for the logs directory: WAE# dir logs size time of last change ------------- ------------------------4096 Thu Apr 6 12:13:50 2006 4096 Mon Mar 6 14:14:41 2006 4096 Sun Apr 16 23:36:40 2006 4096 Thu Feb 16 11:51:51 2006 92 Wed Apr 12 20:23:20 2006 4096 Wed Apr 12 20:23:43 2006 0 Wed Apr 12 20:23:41 2006 4096 Sun Mar 19 18:47:29 2006 name
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Managing WAAS Files Per Device Managing WAAS Files Per Device The WAAS CLI provides several commands for managing files and viewing their contents per device. These commands are entered from privileged EXEC mode. Table 1-5 describes the WAAS file management commands.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Managing WAAS Files Per Device The following example shows how to save the currently running configuration to the startup configuration using the copy EXEC command: WAE# copy running-config startup-config Note To back up, restore, or create a system report about the WAFS-specific configuration on a WAE, use the wafs EXEC command. To save the WAFS-system specific configuration information, use the wafs backup-config EXEC command.
Chapter 1 Using the WAAS Command-Line Interface Managing WAAS Files Per Device Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 1-14 OL-11817-01
C H A P T E R 2 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary This chapter summarizes the Cisco WAAS 4.0.7 software commands. Table 2-1 lists the WAAS commands (alphabetically) and indicates the command mode for each command. The commands used to access configuration modes are marked with an asterisk. Commands that do not indicate a particular mode are EXEC mode commands. The same command may have different effects when entered in a different command mode, so they are listed and documented separately.
Chapter 2 Table 2-1 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode Device Mode (config-if) bandwidth Sets the specified interface bandwidth to 10, 100, or 1000 Mbps. interface configuration All (config) banner Configures message-of-the-day, login, login and EXEC banners. global configuration All (config) bypass Configures the bypass functions on a WAE. global configuration application accelerator cd Changes the directory.
Chapter 2 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Table 2-1 Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode Device Mode copy system-status Copies the system status for debugging reference. privileged-level EXEC All copy tech-support Copies system information for technical support. privileged-level EXEC All copy tftp Copies the software image from the TFTP server. privileged-level EXEC All cpfile Copies a file to the current directory.
Chapter 2 Table 2-1 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode (config) exec-timeout Configures the length of time that an inactive global configuration Telnet or SSH session remains open. All exit Exits from privileged EXEC mode. privileged-level EXEC All (config) exit Exits from global configuration mode. global configuration All (config-if) exit Exits from interface configuration mode.
Chapter 2 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Table 2-1 Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode Device Mode (config) kernel Enables the kernel debugger configuration mode. global configuration All less Displays the contents of a file using the LESS user-level EXEC and application. privileged-level EXEC All (config) line Specifies the terminal line settings.
Chapter 2 Table 2-1 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode Device Mode (config) policy-engine application classifier Defines a WAE’s application policy and assigns the policy a name, a classifier, and a policy map. global configuration application accelerator (config) policy-engine application map adaptor EPM Configures a WAE’s application policy with advanced policy map lists of the EndPoint Mapper (EPM) service.
Chapter 2 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Table 2-1 Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode Device Mode (config) print-services Enables and disables WAAS print services and configures an administrative group. global configuration All pwd Displays the present working directory. user-level EXEC and privileged-level EXEC All (config) radius-server Configures the RADIUS parameters on a WAAS device.
Chapter 2 Table 2-1 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode Device Mode show disks Displays the disk configurations. user-level EXEC and privileged-level EXEC All show flash Displays the flash memory information. user-level EXEC and privileged-level EXEC All show hardware Displays the system hardware information.
Chapter 2 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Table 2-1 Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode Device Mode show services Displays information related to services. user-level EXEC and privileged-level EXEC All show smb-conf Displays the smb-conf configurations. user-level EXEC and privileged-level EXEC All show snmp Displays the SNMP statistics.
Chapter 2 Table 2-1 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode Device Mode show statistics tfo Displays the Transport Flow Optimization (TFO) statistics for a WAE. user-level EXEC and privileged-level EXEC application accelerator show statistics udp Displays the User Datagram Protocol (UDP) statistics. user-level EXEC and privileged-level EXEC All show statistics wccp Displays the WCCP statistics for a WAE.
Chapter 2 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Table 2-1 Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode Device Mode show wccp Displays the WCCP information for a WAE. user-level EXEC and privileged-level EXEC application accelerator show windows-domain Displays the Windows domain configuration. user-level EXEC and privileged-level EXEC All (config-if) shutdown Shuts down the specified interface.
Chapter 2 Table 2-1 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode Device Mode (config) tcp Configures the TCP parameters. global configuration All tcpdump Dumps the TCP traffic on the network. privileged-level EXEC All telnet Starts the Telnet client. user-level EXEC and privileged-level EXEC All (config) telnet enable Enables the Telnet services. global configuration All terminal Sets the terminal output commands.
Chapter 2 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Table 2-1 Command Summary (continued) Command Description CLI Mode Device Mode undebug Disables the debugging functions. (See debug.) privileged-level EXEC All (config) username Establishes the username authentication. global configuration All wafs Performs backup or restores system privileged-level EXEC configuration, and creates a system report on a WAE.
Chapter 2 Cisco WAAS Software Command Summary Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 2-14 OL-11817-01
C H A P T E R 3 CLI Commands This chapter provides detailed information for the following types of CLI commands for the WAAS software: • EXEC mode commands you can enter after you log in to the WAAS device. See the “EXEC Mode Commands” section for a complete listing of commands. • Global configuration mode commands that you can enter after you log in to the WAAS device and access global configuration mode. See the “Configuration Mode Commands” section for a complete listing of commands.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands EXEC Mode Commands Use the EXEC mode for setting, viewing, and testing system operations. In general, the user EXEC commands allow you to connect to remote devices, change terminal line settings on a temporary basis, perform basic tests, and list system information. The EXEC mode is divided into two access levels: user and privileged. The user EXEC mode is used by local and general system administrators, while the privileged EXEC mode is used by the root administrator.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands cd cd To change from one directory to another directory in the WAAS software, use the cd EXEC command. cd directoryname Syntax Description directoryname Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Directory name. central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this command to navigate between directories and for file management. The directory name becomes the default prefix for all relative paths.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands clear clear To clear the hardware interface, statistics, and other settings, use the clear EXEC command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands clear udp Clears the UDP statistics. windows-domain Clears the Windows domain statistics. tfo Clears the TCP flow optimization (TFO) statistics. all Clears all of the TFO statistics. auto-discovery Clears the TFO auto-discovery statistics. blacklist Clears the TFO blacklist statistics. filtering Clears the TFO filter table statistics. peer Clears the TFO peer statistics. policy-engine Clears the TFO application and pass-through statistics.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands clear WAE# clear logging In the following example, all authentication, RADIUS and TACACS+ information is cleared on the WAAS device: WAE# clear statistics radius WAE# clear statistics tacacs WAE# clear statistics authentication In the following example, all entries in the Windows domain log file are cleared on the WAAS device: WAE# clear windows-domain-log Related Commands show interface show wccp Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-6 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands clock clock To set clock functions or update the calendar, use the clock EXEC command. To clear clock functions and calendar, use the no form of this command. clock {read-calendar | set time day month year | update-calendar} Syntax Description read-calendar Reads the calendar and updates the system clock. set Sets the time and date. time Current time in hh:mm:ss format (hh: 00–23; mm: 00–59; ss: 00–59). day Day of the month (1–31).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands cms cms To configure the Centralized Management System (CMS) embedded database parameters for a WAAS device, use the cms EXEC command. cms {config-sync | database {backup | create | delete | downgrade [script filename] | lcm {enable | disable} | maintenance {full | regular} | restore filename | validate} | deregister [force] | recover {identity word}} Syntax Description config-sync Sets the node to synchronize configuration with the WAAS Central Manager.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands cms Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines The WAAS network is a collection of WAAS device and WAAS Central Manager nodes. One primary WAAS Central Manager retains the WAAS network settings and provides other WAAS network nodes with updates.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands cms When you enter the cms lcm disable command, the CMS process running on the WAEs and the standby WAAS Central Manager does not send the CLI changes to the primary WAAS Central Manager. Settings configured using the device CLIs will not be sent to the primary WAAS Central Manager.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands configure configure To enter global configuration mode, use the configure EXEC command. You must be in global configuration mode to enter global configuration commands. configure To exit global configuration mode, use the end or exit commands. You can also press Ctrl-Z to exit from global configuration mode. Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy cdrom copy cdrom To copy software release files from a CD-ROM, use the copy cdrom EXEC command. copy cdrom install filedir filename Syntax Description cdrom Copies a file from the CD-ROM. install Installs the software release file. filedir Directory location of the software release file. filename Filename of the software release file.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy compactflash copy compactflash To copy software release files from a CompactFlash card, use the copy compactflash EXEC command. copy compactflash install filename Syntax Description compactflash Copies a file from the CompactFlash card. install Installs a software release file. filename Image filename.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy disk copy disk To copy the configuration or image data from a disk to a remote location using FTP or to the startup configuration, use the copy disk EXEC command. copy disk {ftp {hostname | ip-address} remotefiledir remotefilename localfilename | startup-config filename} Syntax Description disk Copies a local disk file. ftp Copies to a file on an FTP server. hostname Hostname of the FTP server. ip-address IP address of the FTP server.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy ftp copy ftp To copy software configuration or image data from an FTP server, use the copy ftp EXEC command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy ftp Defaults No default behaviors or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use the copy ftp disk EXEC command to copy a file from an FTP server to a SYSFS partition on the WAAS device. Use the copy ftp install EXEC command to install an image file from an FTP server on a WAAS device. Part of the image goes to disk and part goes to flash memory.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy ftp Caution Be extraordinarily careful when upgrading a Flash BIOS. Make absolutely sure that the BIOS upgrade patch is the exact one required. If you apply the wrong patch, you can render the system unbootable, making it difficult or impossible to recover even by reapplying the proper patch. Caution Because a failed Flash BIOS update can have dire results, never update a Flash BIOS without first connecting the system to an uninterruptible power supply (UPS).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy ftp upgradeserver.cisco.com FTP server (Version wu-2.6.1-18) ready. Password required for myusername. Sending:PASS ******** Please read the file README_dotfiles it was last modified on Wed Feb 19 16:10:26 2005- 94 days ago Please read the file README_first it was last modified on Wed Feb 19 16:05:29 2005- 94 days ago User myusername logged in. Sending:TYPE I Type set to I.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy http copy http To copy configuration or image files from an HTTP server to the WAAS device, use the copy http EXEC command. copy http install {hostname | ip-address}remotefiledir remotefilename [port portnum] [proxy proxy_portnum] [username username password] Syntax Description http Copies the file from an HTTP server. install Copies the file from an HTTP server and installs the software release file to the local device. hostname Name of the HTTP server.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy http Upgrading the BIOS You can remotely upgrade the BIOS on the WAE-511, WAE-512, WAE-611, WAE-612, and the WAE-7326. All computer hardware has to work with software through an interface. The Basic Input Output System (BIOS) provides such an interface. It gives the computer a built-in starter kit to run the rest of the software from the hard disk drive. The BIOS is responsible for booting the computer by providing a basic set of instructions.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy http Examples The following example shows how to copy an image file from an HTTP server and install the file on the WAAS device: WAE# copy http install 10.1.1.1 //ftp-sj.cisco.com/cisco/waas/4.0 WAAS-4.0.0-k9.bin Enter username for remote ftp server:biff Enter password for remote ftp server:***** Initiating FTP download... printing one # per 1MB downloaded Sending:USER biff 10.1.1.1 FTP server (Version) Mon Feb 28 10:30:36 EST 2000) ready. Password required for biff.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy http Erasing block 2f:280000 - 28ffff Erasing block 30:290000 - 29ffff Erasing block 31:2a0000 - 2affff Erasing block 32:2b0000 - 2bffff Erasing block 33:2c0000 - 2cffff Erasing block 34:2d0000 - 2dffff Erasing block 35:2e0000 - 2effff Erasing block 36:2f0000 - 2fffff Programming block 2f:280000 - 28ffff Programming block 30:290000 - 29ffff Programming block 31:2a0000 - 2affff Programming block 32:2b0000 - 2bffff Programming block 33:2c0000 - 2cffff Programming block 34:2d0000 -
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy running-config copy running-config To copy a configuration or image data from the current configuration, use the copy running-config EXEC command. copy running-config {disk filename | startup-config | tftp {hostname | ip-address} remotefilename} Syntax Description running-config Copies the current system configuration. disk Copies the current system configuration to a disk file. filename Name of the file to be created on disk.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy startup-config copy startup-config To copy configuration or image data from the startup configuration, use the copy startup-config EXEC command. copy startup-config {disk filename | running-config | tftp {hostname | ip-address} remotefilename} Syntax Description startup-config Copies the startup configuration. disk Copies the startup configuration to a disk file. filename Name of the startup configuration file to be copied to the local disk.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy sysreport copy sysreport To copy system troubleshooting information from the device, use the copy sysreport EXEC command. copy sysreport {disk filename | ftp {hostname | ip-address} remotedirectory remotefilename | tftp {hostname | ip-address} remotefilename} [start-date {day month | month day} year [end-date {day month | month day} year]] Syntax Description sysreport Generates and saves a report containing WAAS system information in a file.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy sysreport Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines The copy sysreport command consumes significant CPU and disk resources and can adversely affect system performance while it is running.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy system-status copy system-status To copy status information from the system for debugging, use the copy system-status EXEC command. copy system-status disk filename Syntax Description system-status disk Copies the system status to a disk file. filename Name of the file to be created on the disk.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy tech-support copy tech-support To copy the configuration or image data from the system to use when working with Cisco TAC, use the copy tech-support EXEC command. copy tech-support {disk filename | tftp {hostname | ip-address} remotefilename} Syntax Description tech-support Copies system information for technical support. disk Copies system information for technical support to disk file. filename Name of the file to be created on disk.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy tftp copy tftp To copy configuration or image data from a TFTP server, use the copy tftp EXEC command. copy tftp {disk {hostname | ip-address} remotefilename localfilename | running-config {hostname | ip-address} remotefilename | startup-config {hostname | ip-address} remotefilename} Syntax Description tftp Copies an image from a TFTP server. disk Copies an image from a TFTP server to a disk file. hostname Hostname of the TFTP server.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands copy tftp Related Commands install reload show running-config show startup-config wafs write Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-30 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands cpfile cpfile To make a copy of a file, use the cpfile EXEC command. cpfile oldfilename newfilename Syntax Description oldfilename Name of the file to copy. newfilename Name of the copy to be created. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this EXEC command to create a copy of a file. Only SYSFS files can be copied.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands debug debug To monitor and record the WAAS application acceleration and central manager functions, use the debug EXEC command. To disable debugging, use the no form of the command. (See also the undebug command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands debug In the central manager device mode, the debug commands are as follows: debug aaa accounting debug all debug authentication {content-request | user | windows-domain} debug buf {all | dmbuf | dmsg} debug cdp {adjacency | events | ip | packets} debug cli {all | bin | parser} debug cms debug dataserver {all | clientlib | server} debug dhcp debug emdb [level [levelnum]] debug logging all debug ntp debug rpc {detail | trace} debug snmp {all | cli | main | mib | traps} debug stats {al
Chapter 3 CLI Commands debug packets Enables packet-related CDP debugging. cli (Optional) Enables CLI debugging. all Enables all CLI debugging. bin Enables CLI command binary program debugging. parser Enables CLI command parser debugging. cms (Optional) Enables CMS debugging. dataserver (Optional) Enables data server debugging. all Enables all data server debugging. clientlib Enables data server client library module debugging. server Enables data server module debugging.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands debug traps Enables SNMP trap debugging. stats (Optional) Enables statistics debugging. all Enables all statistics debug commands. collection Enables collection statistics debugging. computation Enables computation statistics debugging. history Enables history statistics debugging. tfo (Optional) Enables TFO debugging. buffer-mgr Enables TFO buffer manager debugging. connection Enables TFO connection debugging.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands debug emdb (Optional) Enables embedded database debugging. level (Optional) Enables the specified debug level for EMDB service. levelnum (Optional) Debug level to disable. (Level 0 disables debugging.) rpc (Optional) Enables the remote procedure calls (RPC) logs. detail Enables the RPC logs of priority “detail” level or higher. trace Enables the RPC logs of priority “trace” level or higher.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands debug Related Commands show debugging undebug Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference OL-11817-01 3-37
Chapter 3 CLI Commands delfile delfile To delete a file from the current directory, use the delfile EXEC command. delfile filename Syntax Description filename Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Name of the file to delete. central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this EXEC command to remove a file from a SYSFS partition on the disk drive of the WAAS device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands deltree deltree To remove a directory along with all of its subdirectories and files, use the deltree EXEC command. deltree directory Syntax Description directory Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Name of the directory tree to delete. central-manager Usage Guidelines Note Examples Use this EXEC command to remove a directory and all files within the directory from the WAAS SYSFS file system.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands dir dir To view details of one file or all files in a directory, use the dir EXEC command. dir [directory] Syntax Description directory Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator (Optional) Name of the directory to list. central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this EXEC command to view a detailed list of files contained within the working directory, including names, sizes, and time created.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands dir The following example shows only the detailed information for the logs directory: WAE# dir logs size time of last change ------------- ------------------------4096 Thu Apr 6 12:13:50 2006 4096 Mon Mar 6 14:14:41 2006 4096 Sun Apr 16 23:36:40 2006 4096 Thu Feb 16 11:51:51 2006 92 Wed Apr 12 20:23:20 2006 4096 Wed Apr 12 20:23:43 2006 0 Wed Apr 12 20:23:41 2006 4096 Sun Mar 19 18:47:29 2006 Related Commands name
----------actona apache emdb exChapter 3 CLI Commands disable disable To turn off privileged EXEC commands, use the disable EXEC command. disable Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use the WAAS software CLI EXEC mode for setting, viewing, and testing system operations. This command mode is divided into two access levels, user and privileged.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands disk disk To configure disks on a WAAS device, use the disk EXEC command. disk delete-partitions diskname disk mark diskname {bad | good} disk reformat diskname disk scan-errors diskname delete-partitions Deletes data on the specified disk drive. After using this command, the WAAS software treats the specified disk drive as blank. All previous data on the drive is inaccessible. diskname Name of the disk from which to delete partitions (disk00, disk01).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands disk RAID-1 (mirroring) is used for all file systems on the device. This setup ensures reliable execution of the software in all cases. Note The WAAS software uses the CONTENT file system for both the Wide Area File Services (WAFS) file system and the data redundancy elimination (DRE) cache.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands disk 5. Mark disk01 as good by entering the disk mark EXEC command. WAE# disk mark disk01 good disk01 is marked as good. It will be used after reload. 6. Verify that Disk01 is now marked as “Not used” by entering the show disks details EXEC command. Reload the WAAS device by entering the reload EXEC command. When asked, press Enter to proceed with the reload. After the WAAS device is reloaded, Disk01, which is marked as a good disk drive, will be used again.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands disk Removing All Disk Partitions on a Single Disk Drive Use the disk delete-partitions EXEC command to remove all disk partitions on a single disk drive on WAAS device. Caution After using the disk delete-partitions EXEC command, the WAAS software treats the specified disk drive as blank. All previous data on the drive is inaccessible.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands dnslookup dnslookup To resolve a host or domain name to an IP address, use the dnslookup EXEC command. dnslookup {hostname | domainname} Syntax Description hostname Name of DNS server on the network. domainname Name of domain. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples The following three examples show how the dnslookup command is used to resolve the hostname myhost to IP address 172.31.69.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands enable enable To access privileged EXEC commands, use the enable EXEC command. enable Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use the WAAS software CLI EXEC mode for setting, viewing, and testing system operations. This command mode is divided into two access levels: user and privileged.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands exit exit To terminate privileged-level EXEC mode and return to the user-level EXEC mode, use the exit command. exit Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes All modes Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines This command is equivalent to the Ctrl-Z or the end command. The exit command issued in the user level EXEC shell terminates the console or Telnet session.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands find-pattern find-pattern To search for a particular pattern in a file, use the find-pattern command in EXEC mode.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands find-pattern Examples The following example shows how to search a file recursively for a case-sensitive pattern: WAE# find-pattern case recursive admin removed_core -rw------1 admin root 95600640 Oct 12 10:27 /local/local1/core_dir/ core.3.0.0.b5.eh.2796 -rw------1 admin root 97054720 Jan 11 11:31 /local/local1/core_dir/ core.cache.3.0.0.b131.cnbuild.14086 -rw------1 admin root 96845824 Jan 11 11:32 /local/local1/core_dir/ core.cache.3.0.0.b131.cnbuild.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands help help To obtain online help for the command-line interface, use the help EXEC command. help Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC and global configuration Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines You can obtain help at any point in a command by entering a question mark (?).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands install install To install a new software image (such as the WAAS software) into flash on the WAAS device, use the install EXEC command. install imagefilename Syntax Description imagefilename Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Name of the .bin file you want to install.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands less less To display a file using the LESS application, use the less EXEC command. less file_name Syntax Description file_name Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Name of the file to be displayed. central-manager Usage Guidelines Examples LESS is an application that displays text files a page at a time. You can use LESS to view the contents of a file, but not edit it.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands lls lls To view a long list of directory names, use the lls EXEC command. lls [directory] Syntax Description directory Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator (Optional) Name of the directory for which you want a long list of files.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands lls Related Commands dir lls ls Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-56 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands ls ls To view a list of files or subdirectory names within a directory, use the ls EXEC command. ls [directory] Syntax Description directory Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator (Optional) Name of the directory for which you want a list of files. central-manager Usage Guidelines Use the ls directory command to list the filenames and subdirectories within a particular directory.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands ls pwd Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-58 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands mkdir mkdir To create a directory, use the mkdir EXEC command. mkdir directory Syntax Description directory Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Name of the directory to create. central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this EXEC command to create a new directory or subdirectory in the WAAS file system.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands mkfile mkfile To create a new file, use the mkfile EXEC command. mkfile filename Syntax Description filename Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Name of the file you want to create. central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this EXEC command to create a new file in any directory of the WAAS device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands ntpdate ntpdate To set the software clock (time and date) on a WAAS device using a NTP server, use the ntpdate EXEC command. ntpdate {hostname | ip-address} Syntax Description hostname NTP hostname. ip-address NTP server IP address. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use NTP to find the current time of day and set the current time on the WAAS device to match.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands ping ping To send echo packets for diagnosing basic network connectivity on networks, use the ping EXEC command. ping {hostname | ip-address} Syntax Description hostname Hostname of system to ping. ip-address IP address of system to ping.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands pwd pwd To view the present working directory on a WAAS device, use the pwd EXEC command. pwd Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this EXEC command to display the present working directory of the WAAS device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands reload reload To halt and perform a cold restart on a WAAS device, use the reload EXEC command. reload [force] Syntax Description force Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator (Optional) Forces a reboot without further prompting. central-manager Usage Guidelines To reboot a WAAS device, use the reload command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands rename rename To rename a file on a WAAS device, use the rename EXEC command. rename oldfilename newfilename Syntax Description oldfilename Original filename. newfilename New filename. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this command to rename any SYSFS file without making a copy of the file. Examples The following example shows how to rename the errlog.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands restore restore To restore the device to its manufactured default status, removing user data from disk and flash memory, use the restore EXEC command. restore {factory-default [preserve basic-config] | rollback} Syntax Description factory-default Resets the device configuration and data to their manufactured default status. preserve (Optional) Preserves certain configurations and data on the device. basic-config (Optional) Selects basic network configurations.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands restore By removing the WAAS Central Manager database, all configuration records for the entire WAAS network are deleted. If you do not have a valid backup file or a standby WAAS Central Manager, you must reregister every WAE with the WAAS Central Manager because all previously configured data is lost.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands restore In the following example, entering the show disks details command after the restore command is used verifies that the restore command has removed data from the partitioned file systems: SYSFS, WAAS, and PRINTSPOOLFS. WAE# show disks details Physical disk information: disk00: Normal disk01: Normal (h00 c00 i00 l00 - DAS) (h00 c00 i01 l00 - DAS) 140011MB(136.7GB) 140011MB(136.7GB) Mounted filesystems: MOUNT POINT / /swstore /state /disk00-04 /local/local1 ...
Chapter 3 CLI Commands restore WAE# show version Cisco Wide Area Application Services Software (WAAS) ... WAE# restore rollback WAE# reload ...... reloading ...... Because flash memory configurations were removed after the restore command was used, the show startup-config command does not return any flash memory data. The show running-config command returns the default running configurations.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands rmdir rmdir To delete a directory on a WAAS device, use the rmdir EXEC command. rmdir directory Syntax Description directory Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Name of the directory that you want to delete. central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this EXEC command to remove any directory from the WAAS file system. The rmdir command only removes empty directories.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands scp scp To copy files between network hosts, use the scp command. scp [1][2][4][6][B][C][p][q][r][v] [c cipher] [F config-file] [i id-file] [l limit] [o ssh_option] [P port] [S program] [[user @] host : file] [...] [[user-n @] host-n : file-n] Syntax Description 1 (Optional) Forces this command to use protocol 1. 2 (Optional) Forces this command to use protocol 2. 4 (Optional) Forces this command to use only IPv4 addresses.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands scp host (Optional) Hostname. file (Optional) Name of the file to copy. Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines The scp command uses SSH for transferring data between hosts. This command prompts you for passwords or pass phrases when needed for authentication.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands script script To execute a script provided by Cisco or check the script for errors, use the script EXEC command. script {check | execute} file_name Syntax Description check Checks the validity of the script. execute Executes the script. The script file must be a SYSFS file in the current directory. file_name Name of the script file.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands setup setup To configure basic configuration settings (general settings, device network settings, and disk configuration) on the WAAS device or to complete basic configuration after upgrading to WAAS software, use the setup EXEC command. setup Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show aaa accounting show aaa accounting To display the AAA accounting configuration information for a WAAS device, use the show aaa EXEC command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show aaa accounting Table 3-1 Related Commands Field Descriptions for the show aaa accounting Command (continued) Field Description wait-start The WAAS device sends both a start and a stop accounting record to the TACACS+ accounting server. However, the requested user service does not begin until the start accounting record is acknowledged. A stop accounting record is also sent. disabled Accounting is disabled for the specified event.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show adapter show adapter To display the status and configuration of the EndPoint Mapper (EPM) adapter, use the show adapter EXEC command. show adapter epm Syntax Description epm Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Usage Guidelines This command is valid for the WAE application-accelerator appliances; it is not valid for the Central Manager (CM) appliance.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show alarms show alarms To display information on various types of alarms, their status, and history on a WAAS device, use the show alarms EXEC command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show alarms The three levels of alarms in WAAS software are as follows: • Critical—Alarms that affect the existing traffic through the WAE, and are considered fatal (the WAE cannot recover and continue to process traffic). • Major—Alarms which indicate a major service (for example, the cache service) has been damaged or lost. Urgent action is necessary to restore this service.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show alarms Table 3-4 Field Descriptions for the show alarms status Command (continued) Field Description Device is NOT in alarm overload state. Status of the device alarm overload state. Device enters alarm overload state @ 999 alarms/sec. Threshold number of alarms per second at which the device enters the alarm overload state. Device exits alarm overload state @ Threshold number of alarms per second at which the device 99 alarms/sec. exits the alarm overload state.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show arp show arp To display the ARP table for a WAAS device, use the show arp EXEC command. show arp Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use the show arp command to display the Internet-to-Ethernet address translation tables of the Address Resolution Protocol.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show authentication show authentication To display the authentication configuration for a WAAS device, use the show authentication EXEC command. show authentication {user | content-request} Syntax Descriptions user Displays authentication configuration for user login to the system. content-request Displays content request authentication configuration information in the disconnected mode.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show authentication Table 3-6 Field Descriptions for the show authentication user Command (continued) Field Description Windows domain RADIUS Operation status of the authentication service. Values are enabled or disabled. Priority status of each authentication service. Values are primary, secondary, or tertiary. TACACS+ Local Table 3-7 describes the field in the show authentication content-request display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show auto-register show auto-register To display the status of a WAE’s automatic registration feature, use the show auto-register EXEC command. show auto-register Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Examples Table 3-8 describes the output in the show auto-register display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show banner show banner To display the message of the day (MOTD), login, and EXEC banner settings, use the show banner EXEC command. show banner Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-9 describes the fields shown in the show banner display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show bypass show bypass To display static bypass configuration information for a WAE, use the show bypass EXEC command. show bypass list Syntax Description list Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Usage Guidelines The maximum number of static bypass entries is 50. Examples Table 3-10 describes the fields shown in the show bypass list display. Table 3-10 Displays the bypass list entries. Maximum of 50.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show cdp show cdp To display CDP configuration information, use the show cdp EXEC command. show cdp [entry neighbor [protocol | version [protocol]] | holdtime | interface [FastEthernet slot/port | GigabitEthernet slot/port] | neighbors [detail | FastEthernet slot/port [detail] | GigabitEthernet slot/port [detail]] | run | timer | traffic] Syntax Description entry (Optional) Displays information for a specific neighbor entry. neighbor Name of CDP neighbor entry.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show cdp Usage Guidelines The show cdp command displays information regarding how frequently CDP packets are resent to neighbors, the length of time that CDP packets are held by neighbors, the disabled status of CDP Version 2 multicast advertisements, CDP Ethernet interface ports, and general CDP traffic information. Examples Table 3-11 describes the fields shown in the show cdp display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show cdp Table 3-12 Field Descriptions for the show cdp entry Command (continued) Field Description Holdtime Time (in seconds) that the current device will hold the CDP advertisement from a transmitting router before discarding it. Version Software version running on the neighbor device. Table 3-13 describes the fields shown in the show cdp entry neighbor protocol display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show cdp Table 3-17 describes the fields shown in the show cdp neighbors display. Table 3-17 Field Descriptions for the show cdp neighbors Command Field Description Device ID Configured ID (name), MAC address, or serial number of the neighbor device. Local Intrfce (Local Interface) Protocol being used by the connectivity media. Holdtime Time (in seconds) that the current device will hold the CDP advertisement from a transmitting router before discarding it.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show cdp Table 3-18 Field Descriptions for the show cdp neighbors detail Command (continued) Field Description VTP Management Domain VLAN trunk protocol management domain. The VLAN information is distributed to all switches that are part of the same domain. Native VLAN VLAN to which the neighbor interface belongs. Table 3-19 describes the field in the show cdp run display. Table 3-19 Field Description for the show cdp run Command Field Description CDP is XX.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show cdp Table 3-21 Related Commands Field Descriptions for the show cdp traffic Command (continued) Field Description CDP version 1 advertisements Output Number of CDP Version 1 advertisements sent by the local device. Input Number of CDP Version 1 advertisements received by the local device. CDP version 2 advertisements Output Number of CDP Version 2 advertisements sent by the local device. Input Number of CDP Version 2 advertisements received by the local device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show clock show clock To display information about the system clock on a WAAS device, use the show clock EXEC command. show clock [detail | standard-timezones {all | details timezone | regions | zones region-name}] Syntax Description detail (Optional) Displays detailed information; indicates the clock source (NTP) and the current summer time setting (if any). standard-timezones (Optional) Displays information about the standard time zones.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show clock Examples Table 3-22 describes the field in the show clock display. Table 3-22 Field Description for the show clock Command Field Description Local time Day of the week, month, date, time (hh:mm:ss), and year in local time relative to the UTC offset. Table 3-23 describes the fields shown in the show clock detail display. Table 3-23 Related Commands Field Descriptions for the show clock detail Command Field Description Local time Local time relative to UTC.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show cms show cms To display Centralized Management System (CMS) embedded database content and maintenance status and other information for a WAAS device, use the show cms EXEC command. show cms {database content {dump filename | text | xml} | info | processes} Syntax Description database Displays embedded database maintenance information. content Writes the database content to a file. dump Dumps all database content to a text file.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show cms Table 3-24 Field Descriptions for the show cms info Command for WAAS Application Engines Field Description Status Connection status of the device to the Central Manager. This field may contain one of 3 values: online, offline, or pending. Time of last config-sync Time when the device management service last contacted the Central Manager for updates.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show cms Table 3-27 describes the field in the show cms database content xml display. Table 3-27 Related Commands Field Description for the show cms database content xml Command Field Description Database content can be found in /local1/cms-db-12-12-2002-17:07:1 1:629.xml. Name and location of the database content XML file. This command requests the management service to write its current configuration to an automatically generated file in XML format.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show debugging show debugging To display the state of each debugging option that was previously enabled on a WAAS device, use the show debugging EXEC command. show debugging Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines This command shows which debug options have been enabled or disabled. If there are no debug options configured, this command shows no output.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show device-mode show device-mode To display the configured or current device mode of a WAAS device, use the show device-mode EXEC command. show device-mode {configured | current} Syntax Description configured Displays the configured device mode, which has not taken effect yet. current Displays the current device mode. Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines You must deploy the WAAS Central Manager on a dedicated appliance.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show device-mode Examples Table 3-28 describes the field in the show device-mode current display. Table 3-28 Field Description for the show device-mode current Command Field Description Current device mode Current mode in which the WAAS device is operating. Table 3-29 describes the field in the show device-mode configured display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show disks show disks To view information about the WAAS device disks, use the show disks EXEC command. show disks {details | failed-sectors [disk_name] | SMART-info [details]} Syntax Description details Displays currently effective configurations with more details. failed-sectors Displays a list of failed sectors on all disks. disk_name (Optional) Name of the disk for which failed sectors are displayed (disk00 or disk01).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show disks Proactively Monitoring Disk Health with SMART The ability to proactively monitor the health of disks is available using SMART. SMART provides you with hard drive diagnostic information and information about impending disk failures. SMART is supported by most disk vendors and is a standard method used to determine how healthy a disk is.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show disks Table 3-30 Field Descriptions for the show disks details Command (continued) Field Description Software RAID devices If present, lists the software RAID devices and provides the following information for each: Device name Path to the partition on the disk. The partition name “md1” indicates that the partition is a raided partition and that the RAID type is RAID-1. (RAID-1 is the only RAID type supported in WAAS.) Type Type of RAID, for example RAID-1.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show disks Table 3-32 Field Descriptions for the show disks SMART-info details Command (continued) Field Description Serial Number Serial number for the disk. Device type Type of device is disk. Transport protocol Physical layer connector information, for example: Parallel SCSI (SPI-4). Local time is Day of the week, month, date, time hh:mm:ss, year, clock standard. For example, Mon Mar 19 23:33:12 2007 UTC.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show flash show flash To display the flash memory version and usage information for a WAAS device, use the show flash EXEC command. show flash Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-33 describes the fields shown in the show flash display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show hardware show hardware To display system hardware status for a WAAS device, use the show hardware EXEC command. show hardware Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show hardware Table 3-34 Field Descriptions for the show hardware Command (continued) Field Description XXXX Mbytes of Physical memory Number of megabytes of physical memory on the device. X CD ROM drive Number of CD-ROM drives on the device. X GigabitEthernet interfaces Number of Gigabit Ethernet interfaces on the device. X InlineGroup interfaces Number of InlineGroup interfaces on the device. X Console interface Number of console interfaces on the device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show hardware Table 3-34 Field Descriptions for the show hardware Command (continued) Field Type Type of the file system. Values include root, internal, CONTENT, SYSFS, and PRINTSPOOL. Device Path to the partition on the disk. Size Total size of the file system in megabytes. Inuse Amount of disk space being used by the file system. Free Amount of unused disk space for the file system. Use% Percentage of the total available disk space being used by the file system.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show hosts show hosts To view the hosts on a WAAS device, use the show hosts EXEC command. show hosts Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines The show hosts command lists the name servers and their corresponding IP addresses.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show inetd show inetd To display the status of TCP/IP services on a WAAS device, use the show inetd EXEC command. show inetd Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines The show inetd EXEC command displays the enabled or disabled status of TCP/IP services on the WAAS device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show interface show interface To display the hardware interface information for a WAAS device, use the show interface EXEC command. show interface {GigabitEthernet slot/port} | {ide control_num} | {InlineGroup slot/grpnumber} | {InlinePort slot/grpnumber/{lan | wan}} | {PortChannel port-num} | {scsi device_num} | {Standby group_num | usb} Syntax Description GigabitEthernet Displays the Gigabit Ethernet interface device information (only on suitably equipped systems).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show interface Examples Table 3-37 describes the fields shown in the show interface GigabitEthernet display. Table 3-37 Field Descriptions for the show interface GigabitEthernet Command Field Description Description Description of the device, as configured by using the description option of the interface global configuration command. Type Type of interface. Always Ethernet. Ethernet address Layer-2 MAC address.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show interface The following example displays information for inlineGroup 0 in slot 1 configured on the WAE inline network adapter: WAE612# show interface inlineGroup 1/0 Interface is in intercept operating mode. Standard NIC mode is off. Disable bypass mode is off. Watchdog timer is enabled. Timer frequency: 1600 ms. Autoreset frequency 500 ms. The watchdog timer will expire in 1221 ms. Table 3-38 describes the fields shown in the show interface InlinePort display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show interface Table 3-38 Field Descriptions for the show interface InlinePort Command (continued) Field Description Output Packets Dropped Number of outgoing packets that were dropped by this interface. Output Packets Overruns Number of outgoing packet overrun errors. Output Packets Carrier Number of outgoing packet carrier errors. Output Queue Length Output queue length in bytes. Collisions Number of packet collisions at this interface. Base address Base address.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show interface Table 3-40 describes the field shown in the show interface scsi display. Table 3-40 Field Description for the show interface scsi Command Field Description SCSI interface X Information for SCSI device number X. Shows the make, device ID number, model number, and type of SCSI device. Table 3-41 describes the fields shown in the show interface standby display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show inventory show inventory To display the system inventory information for a WAAS device, use the show inventory EXEC command. show inventory Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines The show inventory EXEC command allows you to view the UDI for a WAAS device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show ip access-list show ip access-list To display the access lists that are defined and applied to specific interfaces or applications on a WAAS device, use the show ip access-list EXEC command. show ip access-list [acl-name | acl-num] Syntax Description acl-name (Optional) Information for a specific access list, using an alphanumeric identifier up to 30 characters, beginning with a letter.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show ip access-list Table 3-43 Field Descriptions for the show ip access-list Command (continued) Field Description Extended IP access list Name of a configured extended IP access list. Displays a list of the conditions configured for this list.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show ip routes show ip routes To display the IP routing table for a WAAS device, use the show ip routes EXEC command. show ip routes Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines This command displays the IP route table, which lists all of the different routes that are configured on the WAE.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show kerberos show kerberos To display the Kerberos authentication configuration for a WAAS device, use the show kerberos EXEC command. show kerberos Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use the system message log to view information about events that have occurred on a WAAS device. The syslog.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show logging show logging To display the system message log configuration for a WAAS device, use the show logging EXEC command. show logging Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use the system message log to view information about events that have occurred on a WAAS device. The syslog.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show memory show memory To display memory blocks and statistics for a WAAS device, use the show memory EXEC command. show memory Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-46 describes the fields shown in the show memory display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show ntp show ntp To display the NTP parameters for a WAAS device, use the show ntp EXEC command. show ntp status Syntax Description status Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Displays NTP status. central-manager Examples Table 3-47 describes the fields shown in the show ntp status display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show ntp Related Commands Table 3-47 Field Descriptions for the show ntp status Command (continued) Field Description offset Clock offset relative to the server. jitter Clock jitter.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show policy-engine application show policy-engine application To display application policy information for a WAE, use the show policy-engine application EXEC command. show policy-engine application {classifier [app-classifier] | dynamic | name} Syntax Description classifier Displays information about the specified application classifier. If no classifier is specified, this command displays information about all classifiers.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show policy-engine application Table 3-49 describes the fields shown in the show policy-engine application dynamic display. Table 3-49 Field Descriptions for the show policy-engine application dynamic Command Field Description Dynamic Match Freelist Information Allocated Total number dynamic policies that can be allocated. In Use Number of dynamic matches that are currently in use. Max In Use Maximum number of dynamic matches that have been used since the last reboot.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show policy-engine application Table 3-50 describes the fields shown in the show policy-engine application name display. Table 3-50 Field Descriptions for the show policy-engine application name Command Field Description Number of Applications: X Number of applications defined on the WAE, including all of the default applications. WAAS includes over 150 default application policies.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show policy-engine application Related Commands (config) policy-engine application classifier (config) policy-engine application map adaptor EPM (config) policy-engine application map adaptor WAFS transport (config) policy-engine application map basic delete (config) policy-engine application map basic disable (config) policy-engine application map basic insert (config) policy-engine application map basic list (config) policy-engine application map basic move (config) policy-engine
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show policy-engine status show policy-engine status To display high-level information about a WAE’s policy engine, use the show policy-engine status EXEC command. This information includes the usage of the available resources, which include application names, classifiers, and conditions. show policy-engine status Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Examples Table 3-51 describes the fields shown in the show policy-engine status display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show policy-engine status (config) policy-engine application map other pass-through (config) policy-engine application name (config) policy-engine config Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-130 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show print-services show print-services To display administrative users who have access to configuration privileges, print services, or print service processes on a WAAS device, use the show print-services EXEC command. show print-services {drivers user username | process} Syntax Description process Displays information about the print server and print spooler. drivers Displays printer drivers on this print server.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show print-services Table 3-52 Field Descriptions for the show print-services process Command (continued) Field Description No locked files Comment line. Print Spooler Status Related Commands scheduler is running Operation status of the print spooler scheduler. system default destination Default print destination for WAAS (VistaPrinterOnWAAS). device for (VistaPrinterOnWAAS) Socket address for the system default print destination.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show processes show processes To display CPU or memory processes for a WAAS device, use the show processes EXEC command. show processes [cpu | debug pid | memory | system [delay 1-60 | count 1-100]] Syntax Description cpu (Optional) Displays CPU utilization. debug (Optional) Prints the system call and signal traces for a specified process identifier to display system progress. pid Process identifier. memory (Optional) Displays memory allocation processes.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show processes Examples Table 3-53 describes the fields shown in the show processes display. Table 3-53 Field Descriptions for the show processes Command Field Description CPU Usage CPU utilization as a percentage for user, system overhead, and idle. PID Process identifier. STATE Current state of corresponding processes.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show radius-server show radius-server To display RADIUS configuration information for a WAAS device, use the show radius-server EXEC command. show radius-server Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-54 describes the fields shown in the show radius-server display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show radius-server Related Commands (config) radius-server Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-136 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show running-config show running-config To display a WAAS device’s current running configuration information on the terminal, use the show running-config EXEC command. This command replaces the write terminal command. show running-config Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show services show services To display services-related information for a WAAS device, use the show services EXEC command. show services {ports [port-num] | summary} Syntax Description ports Displays services by port number. port-num (Optional) Up to 8 port numbers (1–65535). summary Displays the services summary.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show smb-conf show smb-conf To view a WAAS device’s current values of the Samba configuration file, smb.conf, use the show smb-conf EXEC command. show smb-conf Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines This command displays the global, print$, and printers parameters values of the smb.conf file for troubleshooting purposes.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show smb-conf force printername = yes lpq cache time = 0 log file = /local/local1/errorlog/samba.log max log size = 50 socket options = TCP_NODELAY SO_RCVBUF=8192 SO_SNDBUF=8192 smb ports = 50139 local master = no domain master = no preferred master = no dns proxy = no template homedir = /local/local1/ template shell = /admin-shell ldap ssl = start_tls comment = Comment: netbios name = MYFILEENGINE realm = ABC wins server = 10.10.10.1 password server = 10.10.10.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show snmp show snmp To check the status of SNMP communications for a WAAS device, use the show snmp EXEC command. show snmp {alarm-history | engine ID | event | group | stats | user} Syntax Description alarm-history Displays SNMP alarm history information. engineID Displays local SNMP engine identifier. event Displays events configured through the Event MIB. group Displays SNMP groups. stats Displays SNMP statistics. user Displays SNMP users.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show snmp Table 3-56 summarizes the mapping of module names to module IDs. Table 3-56 Summary of Module Names to ID Numbers Module Name Module ID AD_DATABASE 8000 NHM 1 NHM/NHM 2500 nodemgr 2000 standby 4000 sysmon 1000 UNICAST_DATA_RECEIVER 5000 UNICAST_DATA_SENDER 6000 Table 3-57 summarizes the mapping of category names to category IDs.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show snmp Table 3-59 Field Descriptions for the show snmp event Command (continued) Field Description (1): Name for the trigger. This name is locally-unique and administratively assigned. For example, this field might contain the “isValid” trigger name. Numbering indicates that this is the first management trigger listed in the show output. Comment: Description of the trigger’s function and use. For example: WAFS license file is not valid.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show snmp Table 3-59 Field Descriptions for the show snmp event Command (continued) Field Description Start: Starting value for which this instance will be triggered. ObjOwn: Object owner. Obj: Object. EveOwn: Event owner. Eve: Event. Type of SNMP event. For example: CLI_EVENT. Delta Value Table: Table containing trigger information for delta sampling. (0): Thresh: Threshold value to check against if the trigger type is threshold.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show snmp Table 3-61 Field Descriptions for the show snmp stats Command (continued) Field Description Number of requested variables Number of variables requested by SNMP managers. Number of altered variables Number of variables altered by SNMP managers. Get-request PDUs Number of GET requests received. Get-next PDUs Number of GET-NEXT requests received. Set-request PDUs Number of SET requests received. SNMP packets output Total number of SNMP packets sent by the router.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show snmp (config) snmp-server view snmp trigger Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-146 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show ssh show ssh To display the status and configuration information of the Secure Shell (SSH) service for a WAAS device, use the show ssh EXEC command. show ssh Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-63 describes the fields shown in the show ssh display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show standby show standby To display information about a standby interface on a WAAS device, use the show standby EXEC command. show standby Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines To display information about a specific standby group configuration, enter the show interface standby standby group_num EXEC command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show standby Related Commands show interface show running-config show startup-config (config-if) standby Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference OL-11817-01 3-149
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show startup-config show startup-config To display the startup configuration for a WAAS device, use the show startup-config EXEC command. show startup-config Syntax Description This command has no keywords or arguments. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this EXEC command to display the configuration used during an initial bootup, stored in NVRAM.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show startup-config Related Commands configure copy running-config show running-config Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference OL-11817-01 3-151
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics authentication show statistics authentication To display authentication statistics for a WAAS device, use the show statistics authentication EXEC command. show statistics authentication Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics content-distribution-network show statistics content-distribution-network To display the status of a WAE or device group that are registered with a WAAS Central Manager, use the show statistics content-distribution-network EXEC command. This command is available on only WAAS Central Managers.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics dre show statistics dre To display Data Redundancy Elimination (DRE) general statistics for a WAE, use the show statistics dre EXEC command. show statistics dre Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Examples Table 3-65 describes the fields shown in the show statistics dre display. This command shows the aggregated statistics for all connections.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics dre Table 3-65 Field Descriptions for the show statistics dre Command (continued) Field LZ: [msg | in | out | ratio] Description Number of LZ messages. Note LZ compression is applied after DRE compression is applied. (DRE compression is always applied first.) LZ Bypass: [msg | in | out | ratio] Number of LZ messages that were bypassed for compression. Average Latency Average time to compress one message for both DRE and LZ in milliseconds (ms).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics dre connection show statistics dre connection To display Data Redundancy Elimination (DRE) connection statistics for a WAE, use the show statistics dre connection EXEC command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics dre connection Examples Table 3-66 describes the fields shown in the show statistics dre connection display. Table 3-66 Field Descriptions for the show statistics dre connection Command Field Description Conn-ID Connection ID assigned by the device for each connection. Peer No. Number assigned to the peer compression device. Client-ip:port IP address and port of the client device that initialized the TCP connection, such as the user’s PC or laptop.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics dre peer show statistics dre peer To display Data Redundancy Elimination (DRE) peer statistics for a WAE, use the show statistics dre peer EXEC command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics dre peer Table 3-67 Field Descriptions for the show statistics dre peer Command (continued) Field Description Concurrent connections (Last 2 min): max Maximum number of concurrent connections in the last two minutes. avg Average number of concurrent connections in the last two minutes. Encode Overall: [msg | in | out | ratio] Statistics for compressed messages. Aggregated statistics for compressed messages. msg = Total number of messages.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics dre peer Related Commands debug show statistics dre connection Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-160 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics epm show statistics epm To display EndPoint Mapper (EPM) statistics for a WAE, use the show statistics epm EXEC command. show statistics epm Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Usage Guidelines This command displays the number of total requests and responses recorded. Examples Table 3-68 describes the fields shown in the show statistics epm display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics icmp show statistics icmp To display ICMP statistic for a WAAS device, use the show statistics icmp EXEC command. show statistics icmp Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-69 describes the fields shown in the show statistics icmp display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics icmp Table 3-69 Related Commands Field Descriptions for the show statistics icmp Command (continued) Field Description ICMP messages sent Total total number of ICMP messages which this entity attempted to send. This counter includes all those counted as ICMP output errors. ICMP messages send failed Number of number of ICMP messages which this entity did not send because of problems discovered within ICMP, such as a lack of buffers.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics ip show statistics ip To display IP statistics for a WAAS device, use the show statistics ip EXEC command. show statistics ip Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-70 describes the fields shown in the show statistics ip display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics ip Table 3-70 Field Descriptions for the show statistics ip Command (continued) Field Description unknown protocol Number of locally-addressed datagrams received successfully but discarded because of an unknown or unsupported protocol. discarded Number of input IP datagrams for which no problems were encountered to prevent their continued processing, but which were discarded (such as, for lack of buffer space).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics ip Related Commands clear (config) ip (config-if) ip show ip routes Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-166 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics netstat show statistics netstat To display Internet socket connection statistics for a WAAS device, use the show statistics netstat EXEC command. show statistics netstat Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-71 describes the fields shown in the show statistics netstat display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics radius show statistics radius To display RADIUS authentication statistics for a WAAS device, use the show statistics radius EXEC command. show statistics radius Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-72 describes the fields shown in the show statistics radius display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics radius Table 3-72 Field Descriptions for the show statistics radius Command (continued) Field Related Commands Description Number of accounting failure responses Number of accounting failure responses. Number of accounting success responses Number of accounting success responses.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics services show statistics services To display services statistics for a WAAS device, use the show statistics services EXEC command. show statistics services Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-73 describes the fields shown in the show statistics services display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics snmp show statistics snmp To display SNMP statistics for a WAAS device, use the show statistics snmp EXEC command. show statistics snmp Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-74 describes the fields shown in the show statistics snmp display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics snmp Table 3-74 Field Descriptions for the show statistics snmp Command (continued) Field Related Commands Description Bad values errors Number of SNMP SET requests that specified an invalid value for a MIB object. General errors Number of SNMP SET requests that failed because of some other error. (It was not a No such name error, Bad values error, or any of the other specific errors.) Response PDUs Number of responses sent in reply to requests.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics tacacs show statistics tacacs To display TACACS+ authentication and authorization statistics for a WAAS device, use the show statistics tacacs EXEC command. show statistics tacacs Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-75 describes the fields shown in the show statistics tacacs display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics tacacs Table 3-75 Field Descriptions for the show statistics tacacs Command (continued) Field Related Commands Description Number of accounting failure responses Number of accounting failure responses. Number of accounting success responses Number of accounting success responses.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics tcp show statistics tcp To display TCP statistics for a WAAS device, use the show statistics tcp EXEC command. show statistics tcp Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-76 describes the fields shown in the show statistics tcp display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics tcp Table 3-76 Field Descriptions for the show statistics tcp Command (continued) Field Description Segments sent Total number of segments sent, including those on current connections but excluding those containing only retransmitted octets. Bad segments received Number of bad segments received. Segments retransmitted Total number of segments retransmitted, that is, the number of TCP segments transmitted containing one or more previously transmitted octets.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics tcp Table 3-76 Field Descriptions for the show statistics tcp Command (continued) Field Description PAWS passive Number of incoming SYN packets dropped because of a PAWS check failure. PAWS active Number of incoming SYN-ACK packets dropped because of a PAWS check failure. PAWS established Number of packets dropped in ESTABLISHED state because of a PAWS check failure. Delayed acks sent Number of delayed ACKs sent.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics tcp Table 3-76 Related Commands Field Descriptions for the show statistics tcp Command (continued) Field Description TCP SACK failures Number of TCP SACK failures. TCP loss failures Number of TCP loss failures. TCP fast retransmissions Number of TCP fast retransmissions. TCP forward retransmissions Number of TCP forward retransmissions. TCP slowstart retransmissions Number of TCP slow start retransmissions. TCP Timeouts Number of TCP timeouts.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics tfo show statistics tfo To display Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) statistics for a WAE, use the show statistics tfo EXEC command. show statistics tfo [application app-name | pass-through | peer | saving app-name] Syntax Description application (Optional) Displays statistics per application. app-name Application name. pass-through (Optional) Displays the pass-through statistics. peer (Optional) Displays peer information.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics tfo Table 3-77 Field Descriptions for the show statistics tfo Command (continued) Field Description Opt socket close while waiting to The socket between two WAEs (WAN socket) closed before write completing writing into it. Unopt socket close while waiting The socket between the WAE and the client/server (LAN to write socket) closed before completing writing into it.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics udp show statistics udp To display User Datagram Protocol (UDP) statistics for a WAAS device, use the show statistics udp EXEC command. show statistics udp Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-78 describes the fields shown in the show statistics udp display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics wccp show statistics wccp To display WCCP statistics for a WAE, use the show statistics wccp EXEC command. show statistics wccp gre Syntax Description gre Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Usage Guidelines GRE is a Layer 3 technique that allows datagrams to be encapsulated into IP packets at the WCCP-enabled router and then redirected to a WAE (the transparent proxy server).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics wccp Examples Table 3-79 describes the fields shown in the show statistics wccp gre display. Table 3-79 Field Descriptions for the show statistics wccp gre Command Field Description Transparent GRE packets received Total number of GRE packets received by the WAE, regardless of whether or not they have been intercepted by WCCP. GRE is a Layer 3 technique that allows packets to reach the WAE, even if there are any number of routers in the path to the WAE.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics wccp Table 3-79 Field Descriptions for the show statistics wccp gre Command (continued) Field Description Connections bypassed due to load Number of connection flows that are bypassed when the WAE is overloaded. When the overload bypass option is enabled, the WAE bypasses a bucket and reroutes the overload traffic. If the load remains too high, another bucket is bypassed, and so on, until the WAE can handle the load.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics wccp Table 3-79 Field Descriptions for the show statistics wccp gre Command (continued) Field Description Packets due to clean wccp shutdown Number of connection flows that are bypassed due to a clean WCCP shutdown. During a proper shutdown of WCCP, the WAE continues to service the flows it is handling but starts to bypass new flows.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics wccp Related Commands (config) wccp access-list (config) wccp flow-redirect (config) wccp router-list (config) wccp shutdown (config) wccp slow-start (config) wccp tcp-promiscuous (config) wccp tcp-promiscuous Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-186 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics windows-domain show statistics windows-domain To display Windows domain server information for a WAAS device, use the show windows-domain EXEC command. show statistics windows-domain Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show statistics windows-domain Table 3-80 Field Descriptions for the show statistics windows-domain Command (continued) Field Related Commands Description Number of accounting requests Number of accounting requests. Number of accounting failure responses Number of accounting failure responses. Number of accounting success responses Number of accounting success responses.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show sysfs show sysfs To display system file system (sysfs) information for a WAAS device, use the show sysfs EXEC command. show sysfs volumes Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines The system file system (sysfs) stores log files, including transaction logs, syslogs, and internal debugging logs. It also stores system image files and operating system files.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tacacs show tacacs To display TACACS+ authentication protocol configuration information for a WAAS device, use the show tacacs EXEC command. show tacacs Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-82 describes the fields shown in the show tacacs display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tacacs Table 3-82 Related Commands Field Descriptions for the show tacacs Command (continued) Field Description Server Hostname or IP address of the TACACS+ server. Status Indicates whether server is the primary or secondary host.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tcp show tcp To display TCP configuration information for a WAAS device, use the show tcp EXEC command. show tcp Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-83 describes the fields shown in the show tcp display. This command displays the settings configured with the tcp global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tcp Related Commands clear show statistics tcp (config) tcp Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference OL-11817-01 3-193
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tech-support show tech-support To view information necessary for Cisco’s TAC to assist you, use the show tech-support EXEC command. show tech-support [page] Syntax Description page Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator (Optional) Displays output page by page. central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this command to view system information necessary for TAC to assist you with a WAAS device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tech-support List of all disk drives: Physical disk information: disk00: Normal disk01: Normal (IDE disk) (IDE disk) 76324MB( 74.5GB) 76324MB( 74.5GB) Mounted filesystems: MOUNT POINT / /sw /swstore /state /disk00-04 /local/local1 ...
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tech-support show processes memory show memory show interface show cdp entry show cdp neighbors show statistics wccp show alarms all show statistics tfo show statistics tfo application show statistics tfo saving show statistics tfo pass-through show statistics tfo peer show tfo auto-discovery show tfo status show tfo accelerators show tfo bufpool accounting show policy-engine status show policy-engine application show statistics dre show statistics dre peer show statistics tcp s
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show telnet show telnet To display Telnet services configuration for a WAAS device, use the show telnet EXEC command. show telnet Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tfo accelerators show tfo accelerators To display Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) accelerators information for a WAE, use the show tfo accelerators EXEC command. show tfo accelerators Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Examples The following example displays TFO accelerator information for the WAE: WAE# show tfo accelerators Name: TFO State: Registered, Handling Level: 100% Keepalive timeout: 3.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tfo auto-discovery show tfo auto-discovery To display Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) auto-discovery statistics for a WAE, use the show tfo auto-discovery EXEC command. show tfo auto-discovery [blacklist {entries [netmask netmask] [|] | statistics [|]}] [list] [| {begin regex [regex] | exclude regex [regex] | include regex [regex]}] Syntax Description blacklist (Optional) Displays the blacklist servers table.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tfo auto-discovery Unix allocation failures: Connect lookup failures: Packets: Memory allocation failures: Total Sent: Total Received: Incorrect length or checksum received: Invalid filtering tuple received: Received for dead connection: Ack dropped in synack received state: Non Syn dropped in nostate state: Auto discovery failure: No peer or asymmetric route: Insufficient option space: Invalid connection state: Missing Ack conf: Auto discovery success TO: Internal server: Exter
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tfo bufpool show tfo bufpool To display Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) buffer pool information for a WAE, use the show tfo bufpool EXEC command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tfo bufpool show tfo filtering show tfo status show statistics tfo Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-202 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tfo connection show tfo connection To display Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) connection information for a WAE, use the show tfo connection EXEC command. show tfo connection [[summary] | [client-ip host-address | client-port port | peer-id mac | server-ip host-address | server-port port]] Syntax Description summary (Optional) Displays a summary list of connections. client-ip (Optional) Source IP address. host-address Hostname or IP address.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tfo connection Related Commands show statistics dre connection show statistics tfo show tfo accelerators show tfo auto-discovery show tfo bufpool show tfo filtering show tfo status Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-204 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tfo filtering show tfo filtering To display information about the incoming and outgoing TFO flows that the WAE currently has, use the show tfo filtering EXEC command. show tfo filtering [list [| {begin regex [regex] | exclude regex [regex] | include regex [regex] }]] [| {begin regex [regex] | exclude regex [regex] | include regex [regex]}] Syntax Description list (Optional) Lists TCP flows that the WAE is currently optimizing or passing through.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tfo filtering 10.99.22.200:1984 10.99.22.200:1800 10.99.11.200:1392 10.99.22.200:20 10.99.11.200:1417 10.99.22.200:1987 10.99.11.200:1438 10.99.22.200:1990 10.99.22.200:80 10.99.22.200:80 10.99.22.200:1985 10.99.22.200:80 10.99.22.200:80 10.99.22.200:80 Related Commands 10.99.11.200:80 10.99.11.200:23 10.99.22.200:80 10.99.11.200:1417 10.99.22.200:20 10.99.11.200:80 10.99.22.200:5222 10.99.11.200:80 10.99.11.200:1426 10.99.11.200:1425 10.99.11.200:80 10.99.11.200:1410 10.99.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tfo status show tfo status To display global Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) status information for a WAE, use the show tfo status EXEC command. show tfo status Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Examples The following example displays global TFO status information for the WAE: WAE# show tfo status Optimization Status: Configured: optimize full Current: optimize full TFO is up since Sat Feb 25 13:18:51 2006 TFO is functioning normally.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show tfo synq show tfo synq To display the cumulative statistics for the SynQ module, use the show tfo synq EXEC command. show tfo synq [list [| {begin regex [regex] | exclude regex [regex] | include regex [regex]}]] [| {begin regex [regex] | exclude regex [regex] | include regex [regex]}] Syntax Description list (Optional) Lists the connections tracked in the SynQ module. | (Optional) Output modifier. begin Begins with the line that matches the regular expression.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show transaction-logging show transaction-logging To display the transaction log configuration settings and a list of archived transaction log files for a WAE, use the show transaction-logging EXEC command. show transaction-logging Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show user show user To display user identification number and username information for a particular user of a WAAS device, use the show user EXEC command. show user {uid number | username name} Syntax Description uid Displays user information based on the identification number of the user. number Identification number (0–65535). username Displays user information based on the name of the user. name Name of user.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show users administrative show users administrative To display users with administrative privileges to the WAAS device, use the show users administrative EXEC command. show users administrative Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-85 describes the fields shown in the show users administrative history display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show users administrative Related Commands clear (config) username Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-212 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show version show version To display version information about the WAAS software that is running on the WAAS device, use the show version EXEC command. show version [last | pending] Syntax Description last Displays the version information for the last saved image. pending Displays the version information for the pending upgraded image.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show wccp show wccp To display Web Cache Connection Protocol (WCCP) information for a WAE, use the show wccp EXEC command. show wccp file-engines show wccp flows {tcp-promiscuous} [summary] show wccp gre show wccp masks {tcp-promiscuous} [summary] show wccp modules show wccp routers show wccp services [detail] show wccp slowstart {tcp-promiscuous} [summary] show wccp status Syntax Description file-engines Displays which WAEs are seen by which routers.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show wccp Examples Table 3-88 describes the fields shown in the show wccp gre display. Table 3-88 Field Descriptions for the show wccp gre Command Field Description Transparent GRE packets received Total number of GRE packets received by the WAE, regardless of whether or not they have been intercepted by WCCP. GRE is a Layer 3 technique that allows packets to reach the WAE, even if there are any number of routers in the path to the WAE.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show wccp Table 3-88 Field Descriptions for the show wccp gre Command (continued) Field Description Connections bypassed due to load Number of connection flows that are bypassed when the WAE is overloaded. When the overload bypass option is enabled, the WAE bypasses a bucket and reroutes the overload traffic. If the load remains too high, another bucket is bypassed, and so on, until the WAE can handle the load.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show wccp Table 3-88 Field Descriptions for the show wccp gre Command (continued) Field Description Packets due to clean wccp shutdown Number of connection flows that are bypassed due to a clean WCCP shutdown. During a proper shutdown of WCCP, the WAE continues to service the flows it is handling but starts to bypass new flows. When the number of flows goes down to zero, the WAE takes itself out of the cluster by having its buckets reassigned to other WAEs by the lead WAE.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show wccp The following example shows the output of the show wccp services command: WAE# show wccp services Services configured on this File Engine TCP Promiscuous 61 TCP Promiscuous 62 The following example is partial output from the show wccp services detail command: WAE# show wccp services detail Service Details for TCP Promiscuous 61 Service Service Enabled : Yes Service Priority : 34 Service Protocol : 6 Application : Unknown Service Flags (in Hex) : 501 Service Ports : 0 : 0 S
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show wccp The following example is the output from the show wccp routers command: WAE# show wccp routers Router Information for Service: TCP Promiscuous 61 Routers Configured and Seeing this File Engine(1) Router Id Sent To Recv ID 0.0.0.0 10.10.20.1 00000000 Routers not Seeing this File Engine 10.10.20.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show windows-domain show windows-domain To display Windows domain configuration information for a WAAS device, use the show windows-domain EXEC command. show windows-domain Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Examples Table 3-89 describes the fields shown in the show windows-domain display.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands show windows-domain Related Commands windows-domain (config) windows-domain Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference OL-11817-01 3-221
Chapter 3 CLI Commands shutdown shutdown To shut down the WAAS device use the shutdown EXEC command. shutdown [poweroff] Syntax Description poweroff Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator (Optional) Turns off the power after closing all applications and operating system. central-manager Usage Guidelines A controlled shutdown refers to the process of properly shutting down a WAAS device without turning off the power on the device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands shutdown The shutdown poweroff command closes all applications and the operating system, stops all system activities, and turn off the power. The fans stop running and the power LED starts flashing, indicating that the device has been powered off. Note If you use the shutdown or shutdown poweroff commands, the device does not perform a file system check when you power on and boot the device the next time.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands shutdown To power down the WAAS device, press and hold the power button on the WAAS device, or use one of the following methods to perform a shutdown poweroff: • From the console command line, enter 2 when prompted, as follows: ================= SHUTDOWN SHELL ================= System has been shut down. You can either Power down system by pressing and holding power button or 1. Reload system through software 2.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands snmp trigger snmp trigger To configure thresholds for a user-selected MIB object for monitoring purposes on a WAAS device, use the snmp trigger EXEC command. Use the no form of this command to return the setting to the default value.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands snmp trigger Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Using the snmp trigger global configuration command, you can define additional SNMP traps for other MIB objects of interest to your particular configuration. You can select any MIB object from any of the support MIBs for your trap.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands snmp trigger Examples The following example shows how to create a threshold for the MIB object esConTabIsConnected so that a trap is sent when the connection from the Edge WAE to the Core WAE is lost: WAE# snmp trigger create esConTabIsConnected ? <60-600> The number of seconds to wait between trigger sample wildcard Option to treat the MIB variable as wildcarded WAE# snmp trigger create esConTabIsConnected wildcard 600 ? absent Absent existence test equal Equality threshold test fa
Chapter 3 CLI Commands ssh ssh To allow secure encrypted communications between an untrusted client machine and a WAAS device over an insecure network, use the ssh EXEC command. ssh options Syntax Description options Defaults By default, the Secure Shell (SSH) feature is disabled on a WAAS device. Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Options to use with the ssh EXEC command. For more information about the possible options, see Request for Comments (RFC 4254) at http://www.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands tcpdump tcpdump To dump network traffic, use the tcpdump EXEC command. tcpdump [LINE] Syntax Description LINE Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator (Optional) Dump options. central-manager Usage Guidelines TCPdump is a utility that allows a user to intercept and capture packets passing through a network interface, making it useful for troubleshooting network applications.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands telnet telnet To log in to a WAAS device using the Telnet client, use the telnet EXEC command. telnet {hostname | ip-address} [portnum] Syntax Description hostname Hostname of the network device. ip-address IP address of the network device. portnum (Optional) Port number (1–65535). Default port number is 23. Defaults The default port number is 23.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands terminal terminal To set the number of lines displayed in the console window, or to display the current console debug command output, use the terminal EXEC command. terminal {length length | monitor [disable]} Syntax Description length Sets the length of the display on the terminal. length Length of the display on the terminal (0–512). Setting the length to 0 means there is no pausing. monitor Copies the debug output to the current terminal.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands tethereal tethereal To analyze network traffic from the command line, use the tethereal EXEC command. tethereal [LINE] Syntax Description LINE Defaults No default behavior values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator (Optional) Options. central-manager Usage Guidelines Tethereal is the command line version of the network traffic analyzer tool Ethereal. Like TCPdump, it also uses the packet capture library (libpcap).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands tethereal visual - Visual Networks traffic capture 5views - Accellent 5Views capture niobserverv9 - Network Instruments Observer version 9 default is libpcap Related Commands tcpdump Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference OL-11817-01 3-233
Chapter 3 CLI Commands traceroute traceroute To trace the route between a WAAS device to a remote host, use the traceroute EXEC command. traceroute {hostname | ip-address} Syntax Description hostname Name of remote host. ip-address IP address of remote host. Defaults No default behavior values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Traceroute is a widely available utility on most operating systems.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands transaction-log transaction-log To force the exporting or the archiving of the transaction log, use the transaction-log EXEC command. transaction-log {export | tfo force archive} Syntax Description export Forces the archiving of a WAE’s transaction file. tfo force archive Forces the archiving of the Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) transaction log file.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands type type To display a file, use the type EXEC command. type filename Syntax Description filename Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator Name of file. central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this EXEC command to display the contents of a file within any file directory on a WAAS device. This command may be used to monitor features such as transaction logging or system logging (syslog).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands type-tail type-tail To view a specified number of lines of the end of a log file, to view the end of the file continuously as new lines are added to the file, to start at a particular line in the file, or to include or exclude specific lines in the file, use the type-tail command in EXEC mode. type-tail filename [line | follow | | {begin LINE | exclude LINE | include LINE}] Syntax Description filename File to be examined.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands type-tail Examples The following example looks for a list of log files in the /local1 directory and then displays the last ten lines of the syslog.txt file. In this example, the number of lines to display is not specified, so the default of ten lines is used: WAE# ls /local1 actona core_dir crash dbupgrade.log downgrade errorlog logs lost+found sa service_logs spool syslog.txt syslog.txt.1 syslog.txt.2 syslog.txt.3 syslog.txt.4 var wdd.sh.signed WAE# type-tail /local1/syslog.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands undebug undebug To disable debugging functions, use the undebug EXEC command. (See also the no form of the debug EXEC command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands undebug In the central manager device mode, the undebug commands are as follows: undebug aaa accounting undebug all undebug authentication {content-request | user | windows-domain} undebug buf {all | dmbuf | dmsg} undebug cdp {adjacency | events | ip | packets} undebug cli {all | bin | parser} undebug cms undebug dataserver {all | clientlib | server} undebug dhcp undebug emdb [level [levelnum]] undebug logging all undebug ntp undebug rpc {detail | trace} undebug snmp {all | cli | mai
Chapter 3 CLI Commands undebug cli (Optional) Disables CLI debugging. all Disables all CLI debugging. bin Disables CLI command binary program debugging. parser Disables CLI command parser debugging. cms (Optional) Disables CMS debugging. dataserver (Optional) Disables data server debugging. all Disables all data server debugging. clientlib Disables data server client library module debugging. server Disables data server module debugging. dhcp (Optional) Disables DHCP debugging.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands undebug traps Disables SNMP trap debugging. tfo (Optional) Disables TFO debugging. buffer-mgr Disables TFO buffer manager debugging. connection Disables TFO connection debugging. auto-discovery [acl] (Optional) Disables TFO connection debugging for the auto-discovery module. comp-mgr [acl] (Optional) Disables TFO connection debugging for the compression module. conn-mgr [acl] (Optional) Disables TFO connection debugging for the connection manager.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands undebug The following syntax table describes the options that are available in the central manager device mode: emdb (Optional) Disables embedded database debugging. level (Optional) Disables the specified debug level for EMDB service. levelnum (Optional) Debug level to disable. (Level 0 disables debugging.) rpc (Optional) Disables the remote procedure calls (RPC) logs. detail Disables the RPC logs of priority “detail” level or higher.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands wafs wafs To backup, restore, or create a system report about the Wide Area File Services (WAFS)-related network configuration, plus the configurations of file servers, printers, users, and so forth, on a WAE, use the wafs EXEC command. wafs {backup-config filename | restore-config filename | sysreport [filename | date-range from_date end_date filename]} Note Syntax Description Executing the wafs sysreport command can temporarily impact the performance of your WAE.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands wafs Examples The following example creates a backup file of the WAFS configuration information: WAE# wafs ? backup-config restore-config sysreport backup system configurations to a file. restore system configurations from a file. WARNING: After restoring configuration, the system needs to be restarted and re-registered. system report to a file WAE# wafs backup-config backup.tar.gz system configuration is stored in file /local/local1/backup.tar.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands whoami whoami To display the username of the current user, use the whoami EXEC command. whoami Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this EXEC command to display the username of the current user.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands windows-domain windows-domain To access the Windows domain utilities on a WAAS device, use the windows-domain EXEC command. windows-domain diagnostics {findsmb | getent | net | nmblookup | smbclient | smbstatus | smbtree | tdbbackup | tdbdump | testparm | wbinfo} Syntax Description diagnostics Enables selection of Windows domain diagnostic utilities. findsmb Displays the utility for troubleshooting NetBIOS name resolution and browsing.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands windows-domain Examples The following example shows the options available for the Get Entity utility: WAE# windows-domain diagnostics getent --help Usage: getent [OPTION...] database [key ...] getent - get entries from administrative database.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands windows-domain Username Password Privilege Configured in : : : : user98 ***** super user Windows Domain database The following example shows how to register a Windows domain: WAE# windows-domain diagnostics net join -S -U% Related Commands (config) windows-domain Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference OL-11817-01 3-249
Chapter 3 CLI Commands write write To save startup configurations on a WAAS device, use the write EXEC command. write [erase | memory | mib-data | terminal] Syntax Description erase (Optional) Erases startup configuration from NVRAM. memory (Optional) Writes the configuration to NVRAM. This is the default location for saving startup information. mib-data (Optional) Saves MIB persistent configuration data to disk. terminal (Optional) Writes the configuration to a terminal session.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands Configuration Mode Commands Use global configuration mode for setting, viewing, and testing configuration of WAAS software features for the entire device. To enter this mode, enter the configure command from privileged EXEC mode. The prompt for global configuration mode consists of the hostname of the WAE followed by (config) and the pound sign (#). You must be in global configuration mode to enter global configuration commands.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) aaa accounting (config) aaa accounting To configure AAA accounting on a WAAS device, use the aaa accounting command in global configuration mode. aaa accounting {commands {0 | 15} default {start-stop | stop-only | wait-start} tacacs | exec default {start-stop | stop-only | wait-start} tacacs | system default {start-stop | stop-only} tacacs} Syntax Description commands Configures accounting for all commands at the specified privilege level.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) aaa accounting Usage Guidelines The AAA accounting feature enables you to track the activities of an administrative user, services that users access, and the amount of network resources they consume (for example, connection time or the bytes transferred). You can use the AAA accounting feature to track user activity for billing, auditing, reporting, or security purposes. WAAS uses TACACS+ to implement AAA accounting; RADIUS is not currently supported.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) aaa accounting Examples The following example configures TACACS+ on the WAAS device and also specifies that a start accounting notice should be sent at the beginning of the process and a stop accounting notice at the end of the process, and the requested user process should begin regardless of whether the start accounting notice was received by the accounting server: WAE(config)# tacacs key abc WAE(config)# tacacs server 192.168.50.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) aaa accounting The following are some examples of the command accounting report that is available on the TACACS+ server: Wed Apr 14 12:35:38 2004 172.16.0.0 admin ttyS0 0.0.0.0 start start_time=1081924137 task_id=3511 timezone=PST service=shell -lvl=0 cmd=logging console enable Wed Apr 14 12:35:39 2004 172.16.0.0 admin ttyS0 0.0.0.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) adapter (config) adapter To enable the EndPoint Mapper (EPM) service, use the adapter global configuration command. To disable the EPM service, use the no form of the command. adapter epm enable Syntax Description epm Specifies the Microsoft PortMapper adapter. enable Enables the EPM service. Defaults The EPM service is enabled by default when you upgrade to WAAS software release 4.0.3 and later releases.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) alarm overload-detect (config) alarm overload-detect To detect alarm overload situations, use the alarm overload-detect global configuration command. alarm overload-detect {clear 1-999 [raise 10-1000] | enable | raise 10-1000 [clear 1-999]} Syntax Description clear Specifies the threshold at which the alarm overload state on the WAAS device is cleared.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) alarm overload-detect When the WAAS device is in the alarm overload state, the following events occur: • An alarm overload notification is sent to SNMP and the NMS. The clear and raise values are also communicated to SNMP and the NMS. • SNMP traps and NMS notifications for subsequent alarm raise and clear operations are suspended. • Alarm overload clear notification is sent.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) asset (config) asset To set the tag name for the asset tag string, use the asset global configuration command. To remove the asset tag name, use the no form of this command. asset tag name Syntax Description tag Sets the asset tag. name Asset tag name string.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) authentication (config) authentication To specify administrative login authentication and authorization methods for a WAAS device, use the authentication global configuration mode command. To selectively disable options, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) authentication enable Enables the selected administrative login authentication methods for the WAAS device. primary (Optional) Specifies the first method the WAAS device should use for administrative login authentication. secondary (Optional) Specifies the second method the WAAS device should use for administrative login authentication if the primary method fails.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) authentication To configure TACACS+, use the authentication and tacacs commands. To enable TACACS+, use the tacacs enable command. For more information on TACACS+ authentication, see the “(config) tacacs”command. The authentication login radius and authentication configuration radius commands use a remote RADIUS server to determine the level of user access. By default, the local method is enabled, with TACACS+ and RADIUS both disabled for login and configuration.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) authentication Server Redundancy Authentication servers can be specified with the tacacs host or radius-server host global configuration commands. In the case of TACACS+ servers, the tacacs host hostname command can be used to configure additional servers. These additional servers provide authentication redundancy and improved throughput, especially when WAAS device load-balancing schemes distribute the requests evenly between the servers.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) authentication Note Authorization privileges apply to console and Telnet connection attempts, secure FTP (SFTP) sessions, and Secure Shell (SSH, Version 1 and Version 2) sessions. We strongly recommend that you set the administrative login authentication and authorization methods in the same order.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) auto-register (config) auto-register To enable discovery of a Fast Ethernet or Gigabit Ethernet WAE and its automatic registration with the WAAS Central Manager through Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP), use the auto-register global configuration command. To disable the autoregistration feature on a WAE, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) auto-register For autoregistration to work, you must have a DHCP server that is configured with the hostname of the WAAS Central Manager and that is capable of handling vendor class option 43. Note The form of DHCP used for autoregistration is not the same as the interface-level DHCP that is configurable through the ip address dhcp interface configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) auto-register Examples The following example enables autoregistration on GigabitEthernet port 2/0: WAE(config)# auto-register enable GigabitEthernet 2/0 The following example disables autoregistration on all configured interfaces on the WAE: WAE(config)# no auto-register enable Related Commands show auto-register show running-config show startup-config Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference OL-11817-01 3-267
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) banner (config) banner To configure the EXEC, login, and message-of-the-day (MOTD) banners, use the banner global configuration command. To disable the banner feature, use the no form of this command. banner enable | {{exec | login | motd} [message text]} Syntax Description enable Enables banner support on the WAE. exec Configures an EXEC banner. message (Optional) Specifies a message to be displayed when an EXEC process is created.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) banner Note Examples When you run an SSH version 1 client and log in to the WAE, the MOTD and login banners are not displayed. You need to use SSH version 2 to display the banners when you log in to the WAE. The following example shows how to use the banner motd message global configuration command to configure the MOTD banner. In this example, the MOTD message consists of a single line of text. WAE(config)# banner motd message This is a WAAS 4.0.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) banner After the user enters a valid WAAS username and password, the WAE CLI is displayed. The CLI prompt varies depending on the privilege level of the login account.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) bypass (config) bypass To configure static bypass lists on a WAE, use the bypass global configuration command. To disable the bypass feature (clear the static bypass lists), use the no form of this command. bypass static {clientip | any-client} {serverip | any-server} Syntax Description static Adds a static entry to the bypass list. clientip Requests from this IP address bypass the WAE. any-client Bypasses the traffic from any client destined to a particular server.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) bypass A static list of source and destination addresses helps to isolate instances of problem-causing clients and servers. To display static configuration list items, use the show bypass list command as follows: WAE# show bypass list Client Server ----------10.1.17.1:0 172.16.7.52:0 any-client:0 172.16.7.52:0 10.1.17.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) cdp (config) cdp To configure the Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) options globally on all WAAS device interfaces, use the cdp command in global configuration mode. cdp {enable | holdtime seconds | timer seconds} Syntax Description Defaults enable Enables CDP globally. holdtime Sets the length of time in seconds that a receiver keeps CDP packets before they are discarded. The default is 180 seconds.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) cdp Related Commands (config-if) cdp clear show cdp Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-274 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) central-manager (config) central-manager To specify the WAAS Central Manager’s role and port number, use the central-manager global configuration command in central-manager device mode. To specify the IP address or hostname of the WAAS Central Manager with which a WAE is to register, use the central-manager global configuration command in application-accelerator device mode. To negate these actions, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) central-manager If you change the WAAS Central Manager GUI port number, the Centralized Management System (CMS) service is automatically restarted on the WAAS Central Manager if the cms service has been enabled on the WAAS Central Manager by entering the cms enable global configuration command on the WAAS Central Manager.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) central-manager Note We recommend that you upgrade your standby WAAS Central Manager first and then upgrade your primary WAAS Central Manager. We also recommend that you create a database backup on your primary WAAS Central Manager and copy the database backup file to a safe place before you upgrade the software.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) clock (config) clock To set the summer daylight savings time and time zone for display purposes, use the clock global configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) clock Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes global configuration Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines To set and display the local and UTC current time of day without an NTP server, use the clock timezone command with the clock set command. The clock timezone parameter specifies the difference between UTC and local time, which is set with the clock set EXEC command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) clock Table 3-91 Time Zone—Offsets from UTC (continued) Time Zone Offset from UTC Asia/Bangkok +7 Asia/Colombo +6 Asia/Dacca +6 Asia/Hong_Kong +8 Asia/Irkutsk +8 Asia/Jerusalem +2 Asia/Kabul +4.30 Asia/Karachi +5 Asia/Katmandu +5.45 Asia/Krasnoyarsk +7 Asia/Magadan +11 Asia/Muscat +4 Asia/New Delhi +5.30 Asia/Rangoon +6.30 Asia/Riyadh +3 Asia/Seoul +9 Asia/Singapore +8 Asia/Taipei +8 Asia/Tehran +3.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) clock Table 3-91 Examples Time Zone—Offsets from UTC (continued) Time Zone Offset from UTC Europe/Moscow +3 Europe/Paris +1 Europe/Prague +1 Europe/Warsaw +1 Japan +9 Pacific/Auckland +12 Pacific/Fiji +12 Pacific/Guam +10 Pacific/Kwajalein –12 Pacific/Samoa –11 US/Alaska –9 US/Central –6 US/Eastern –5 US/East-Indiana –5 US/Hawaii –10 US/Mountain –7 US/Pacific –8 The following example specifies the local time zone as Pacific Standard Tim
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) cms (config) cms To schedule maintenance and enable the Centralized Management System (CMS) on a WAAS device, use the cms global configuration command. To negate these actions, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) cms Defaults database maintenance regular: enabled database maintenance full: enabled connection: 30 seconds for WAAS Central Manager; 180 seconds for a WAE incoming wait: 30 seconds transfer: 300 seconds Command Modes global configuration Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use the cms database maintenance global configuration command to schedule routine full maintenance cleaning (vacuuming) or a regular maintenance reindexing of the
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) device mode (config) device mode To configure the device mode for the WAAS device, use the device mode global configuration command. To reset the mode of operation on your WAAS device, use the no form of this command. device mode {application-accelerator | central-manager} Syntax Description application-accelerator Configures the WAAS device to function as a WAAS Accelerator. All of your Edge WAEs and Core WAEs should be operating in this mode.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) device mode You can configure an inline WAE as a Central Manager, but the functionality of the inline feature will not be available.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) disk (config) disk To configure how disk errors are handled and to define a disk error-handling threshold on a WAAS device, use the disk global configuration command. Use the no form of this command to return to the default error-handling threshold. disk error-handling {reload | remap | threshold number} Syntax Description error-handling Configures disk error handling. reload Reloads the disk if the system file system (SYSFS) on disk00 has problems.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) disk With a WAAS device, a disk device error is defined as any of the following events: • A SCSI or IDE device error is printed by the Linux kernel. • A disk device access by an application (for example, an open(2), read(2), or write(2) system call) fails with an EIO error code. • A disk device that existed at startup time is not accessible at run time. The disk status is recorded in Flash memory (nonvolatile storage).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) end (config) end To exit global configuration mode, use the end global configuration command. end Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes global configuration Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use the end command to exit global configuration mode after completing any changes to the running configuration.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) exec-timeout (config) exec-timeout To configure the length of time that an inactive Telnet or SSH session remains open on a WAAS device, use the exec-timeout global configuration command. To revert to the default value, use the no form of this command. exec-timeout timeout Syntax Description timeout Defaults The default is 15 minutes. Command Modes global configuration Device Modes application-accelerator Timeout in minutes (0–44640).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) exit (config) exit To terminate global configuration mode and return to the privileged-level EXEC mode, use the exit command. exit Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes All modes Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines This command is equivalent to the Ctrl-Z or the end command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) help (config) help To obtain online help for the command-line interface, use the help global configuration command. help Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes EXEC and global configuration Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines You can obtain help at any point in a command by entering a question mark (?).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) help version WCCP Version Number The following example shows how to use partial help to determine the syntax of a WCCP argument: WAE(config)# wccp tcp ? mask Specify mask used for CE assignment router-list-num Router list number Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-292 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) hostname (config) hostname To configure the network hostname on a WAAS device, use the hostname global configuration command. To reset the hostname to the default setting, use the no form of this command. hostname name Syntax Description name Defaults The default hostname is the model number of the WAAS device (for example WAE-511, WAE-611, or WAE-7326).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) inetd (config) inetd To enable FTP and RCP services on a WAAS device, use the inetd enable global configuration command. To disable these same services, use the no form of this command. inetd enable {ftp | rcp} Syntax Description enable Enables services. ftp Enables FTP services. rcp Enables RCP services. Defaults FTP is enabled; RCP is disabled.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) interface (config) interface To configure a Gigabit Ethernet, InlineGroup, InlinePort, port-channel, or standby interface, use the interface global configuration command. To disable selected options, restore default values, or enable a shutdown interface, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) interface access-group Configures access control for IP packets on this interface using access control list (ACL). acl_num Numeric identifier that identifies the ACL to apply to the current interface. For standard ACLs, the valid range is 1–99; for extended ACLs, the valid range is 100–199. acl_name Alphanumeric identifier of up to 30 characters, beginning with a letter that identifies the ACL to apply to the current interface.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) interface slot/grpnumber/ Slot and inline group number for the selected interface. lan Specifies that you are configuring the LAN port on the inline network adapter. wan Specifies that you are configuring the WAN port on the inline network adapter. autosense (Optional) Sets the inline port adapter LAN interface to automatically sense the interface speed. bandwidth (Optional) Sets the bandwidth of the specified interface.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) interface does not apply; you can configure these Gigabit Ethernet interfaces to run at 10, 100, or 1000 Mbps. On newer WAAS models, the 1000-Mbps setting implies autosense. For example, you cannot configure the Gigabit Ethernet interface to run at 1000 Mbps and half duplex. Using the cdp enable command in global configuration mode enables CDP globally on all the interfaces.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) interface Defining Interface Descriptions You can specify a one-line description for a specific interface on a WAAS device. Use the description text interface configuration command to enter the description for the specific interface. The maximum length of the description text is 240 characters. This feature is supported for the Gigabit Ethernet, port-channel, and Standby interfaces. Note This feature is not currently supported for the SCSI or IDE interfaces.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) interface WAE(config)# The following example enables a shut down interface: WAE(config)# no interface GigabitEthernet 1/0 shutdown The following example creates an EtherChannel. The port channel is port channel 2 and is assigned an IP address of 10.10.10.10 and a netmask of 255.0.0.0: WAE# configure WAE(config)# interface PortChannel 2 WAE(config-if)# ip address 10.10.10.10 255.0.0.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) interface WAE# show interface GigabitEthernet 1/0 Description: This is the interface to the lab type: Ethernet . . .
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) ip (config) ip To change initial network device configuration settings, use the ip global configuration command. To delete or disable these settings, use the no form of this command. ip default-gateway ip-address ip domain-name name1 name2 name3 ip name-server ip-addresses ip path-mtu-discovery enable ip route dest_addrs net_addrs gateway_addrs Syntax Description default-gateway Specifies the default gateway (if not routing IP).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) ip To define a default domain name, use the ip domain-name command. To remove the IP default domain name, use the no form of this command. Up to three domain names can be entered. If a request arrives without a domain name appended in its hostname, the proxy tries to resolve the hostname by appending name1, name2, and name3 in that order until one of these names succeeds.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) ip The following example configures a default domain name for the WAAS device: WAE(config)# ip domain-name cisco.com The following example negates the default domain name for the WAAS device: WAE(config)# no ip domain-name The following example configures a name server for the WAAS device: WAE(config)# ip name-server 10.11.12.13 The following example disables the name server for the WAAS device: WAE(config)# no ip name-server 10.11.12.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) ip access-list (config) ip access-list To create and modify access lists on a WAAS device for controlling access to interfaces or applications, use the ip access-list global configuration commands. To disable an access list, use the no form of the command. ip access-list {standard | extended} {acl-name | acl-num} Syntax Description standard Enables standard ACL configuration mode.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) ip access-list Usage Guidelines Note Use access lists to control access to specific applications or interfaces on a WAAS device. An access control list consists of one or more condition entries that specify the kind of packets that the WAAS device will drop or accept for further processing. The WAAS device applies each entry in the order in which it occurs in the access list, which by default is the order in which you configured the entry.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) ip access-list The following example shows how this configuration appears when you enter the show running-configuration command: ... ! interface GigabitEthernet 1/0 ip address 10.1.1.50 255.255.0.0 ip access-group example in exit . . . ip access-list extended example permit tcp any any eq www permit tcp host 10.1.1.5 any eq ssh exit . . .
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) kerberos (config) kerberos To authenticate a user that is defined in the Kerberos database, use the kerberos global configuration command. To disable authentication, use the no form of the command. kerberos {local-realm kerberos-realm | realm {dns-domain | host} kerberos-realm | server kerberos-realm {hostname | ip-address} [port-number]} Note Syntax Description Your Windows domain server must have a Reverse DNS Zone configured for this command to execute successfully.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) kerberos The KDC server and all hosts with Kerberos authentication configured must interact within a 5-minute window or authentication will fail. All hosts, especially the KDC, should be running NTP. For information about configuring NTP, see the “(config) ntp” command. The KDC server and Admin server must have the same IP address. The default port number for both servers is port 88. The kerberos command modifies the krb5.conf file.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) kernel (config) kernel To enable access to the kernel debugger (kdb), use the kernel kdb global configuration command. Once enabled, kdb is automatically activated if kernel problems occur, or you can manually activate it from the local console for the WAAS device by pressing the required key sequence. To disable access to the kernel debugger, use the no form of the command. kernel kdb Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) line (config) line To specify terminal line settings, use the line global configuration command. To configure the WAAS device to not check for the carrier detect signal, use the no form of the command. line console carrier-detect Syntax Description console Configures the console terminal line settings. carrier-detect Sets the device to check the carrier detect signal before writing to the console.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) logging (config) logging To configure system logging, use the logging global configuration command. To disable logging functions, use the no form of this command. logging {console {enable | priority loglevel} | disk {enable | filename filename | priority loglevel | recycle size} | facility facility | host {hostname | ip-address} [port port_num | priority loglevel | rate-limit message_rate]} Syntax Description console Sets system logging to a console.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) logging facility Use one of the following keywords: • auth—Authorization system • daemon—System daemons • kernel—Kernel • local0—Local use • local1—Local use • local2—Local use • local3—Local use • local4—Local use • local5—Local use • local6—Local use • local7—Local use • mail—Mail system • news—USENET news • syslog—Syslog itself • user—User process • uucp—UUCP system host Sets system logging to a remote host.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) logging Defaults rate-limit (Optional) Sets the rate limit (in messages per second) for sending messages to a host. message_rate Rate limit (in messages per second) for sending messages to the host. (0–10000). Setting the rate limit to 0 disables rate limiting. Logging: on Priority of message for console: warning Priority of message for disk log file: debug Priority of message for a host: warning Log file: /local1/syslog.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) logging • Note Examples priority-code is the severity level of the message that should be sent to the specified remote syslog host. The default priority-code is “warning” (level 4). Each syslog host is capable of receiving a different level of event messages.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) no (config) no To undo a global configuration command or set its defaults, use the no form of a global configuration command. no command Syntax Description aaa Unconfigures AAA. alarm Unconfigures alarm parameters. authentication Unconfigures login authentication and authorization. bypass Unconfigures bypass. cdp Unconfigures CDP. clock Unconfigures the time-of-day clock. disk Unconfigures disk-related parameters. exec-timeout Unconfigures the exec timeout.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) no Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes global configuration Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use the no command to disable functions or negate a command. If you need to negate a specific argument in a command, such as the default gateway IP address, you must include the specific string in your command, such as no ip default-gateway ip-address.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) ntp (config) ntp To configure the NTP server and to allow the system clock to be synchronized by a time server, use the ntp global configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command. ntp server {ip-address | hostname} [ip-addresses | hostnames] Syntax Description server Sets the NTP server IP address for the WAAS device. ip-address NTP server IP address. hostname NTP server hostname.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application classifier (config) policy-engine application classifier To create or edit an existing application classifier on a WAE, use the policy-engine application classifier global configuration command. You can use this command to add or modify rules, also known as match conditions, to identify specific types of traffic. You can also use this command to list the classifier’s match conditions.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application classifier The WAAS software comes with over 150 default application policies that help your WAAS system classify and optimize some of the most common traffic on your network. Before you create a new application policy, we recommend that you review the default policies and modify them as appropriate. It is usually easier to modify an existing policy than to create a new one.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map adaptor EPM (config) policy-engine application map adaptor EPM To configure the application policy with advanced policy map lists of the EndPoint Mapper (EPM) service on a WAE, use the policy-engine application map adaptor EPM global configuration command. To disable the EPM service in the application policy configuration, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map adaptor EPM from (Optional) Specifies the line number of the first application policy map to list. to (Optional) Specifies the line number of the last application policy map to list. move Moves the specified application policy map from one line to another.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map adaptor WAFS transport (config) policy-engine application map adaptor WAFS transport To configure application policies with the Wide Area File Services (WAFS) transport option, use the policy-engine application map adaptor WAFS transport global configuration command. To disable the WAFS transport policy map in the application policy configuration, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map adaptor WAFS transport Related Commands (config) policy-engine application classifier (config) policy-engine application map adaptor EPM (config) policy-engine application map basic delete (config) policy-engine application map basic disable (config) policy-engine application map basic insert (config) policy-engine application map basic list (config) policy-engine application map basic move (config) policy-engine application map basic name (con
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map basic delete (config) policy-engine application map basic delete To delete a specific basic (static) application policy map from the list of application policy maps on a WAE, use the policy-engine application map basic delete global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map basic disable (config) policy-engine application map basic disable To disable a specific basic (static) application policy map from the list of application policy maps on a WAE, use the policy-engine application map basic disable global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map basic insert (config) policy-engine application map basic insert To insert a new basic (static) application policy map to the list of application policy maps on a WAE, use the policy-engine application map basic insert global configuration command. policy-engine application map basic insert {first | last | pos pos} name app-name Syntax Description first Inserts the policy map at the beginning of the list.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map basic list (config) policy-engine application map basic list To display a list of basic (static) application policy maps on a WAE, use the policy-engine application map basic list global configuration command. policy-engine application map basic list [from pos [to pos] | to pos] Syntax Description from (Optional) Starts the listing from the specified position. to (Optional) Stops the listing at the specified position.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map basic move (config) policy-engine application map basic move To move the application policy with the basic policy map list based on only L3 or L4 parameters on a WAE, use the policy-engine application map basic global configuration command. policy-engine application map basic move from pos to pos Syntax Description from Moves the policy at the specified line number. to Moves the policy to the specified line number.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map basic move (config) policy-engine application name Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-330 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map basic name (config) policy-engine application map basic name To configure the application policy with the basic policy map name, use the policy-engine application map basic name global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map basic name Note Related Commands We strongly recommend that you use the WAAS Central Manager GUI to centrally configure application policies for your WAEs. For more information, see the Cisco Wide Area Application Services Configuration Guide.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map other optimize DRE (config) policy-engine application map other optimize DRE To configure the optimize DRE action on non-classified traffic on a WAE, use the policy-engine application map other optimize DRE global configuration command. policy-engine application map other optimize DRE {yes | no} compression {LZ | none} Syntax Description yes Applies the optimize DRE action on non-classified traffic.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map other optimize DRE (config) policy-engine application map other pass-through (config) policy-engine application name Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-334 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map other optimize full (config) policy-engine application map other optimize full To configure the application policy on non-classified traffic with the optimize full action, use the policy-engine application map other optimize full global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application map other pass-through (config) policy-engine application map other pass-through To configure the application policy on nonclassified traffic with the pass-through action on a WAE, use the policy-engine application map other pass-through global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application name (config) policy-engine application name To create a new application definition that specifies general information about an application on a WAE, use the policy-engine application name global configuration command. To delete the application definition, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine application name (config) policy-engine application map basic name (config) policy-engine application map other optimize DRE (config) policy-engine application map other optimize full (config) policy-engine application map other pass-through Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-338 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) policy-engine config (config) policy-engine config To remove application policy configurations or replace application policy configurations with factory defaults on a WAE, use the policy-engine config global configuration command. policy-engine config {remove-all | restore-predefined} Syntax Description remove-all Removes the application policy configurations all together and resets other changed configurations.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) port-channel (config) port-channel To configure the port channel load-balancing options on a WAAS device, use the port-channel global configuration command. Use the no form of this command to set load balancing on the port channel to its default method. port-channel load-balance {dst-ip | dst-mac | round-robin} Syntax Description load-balance Configures the load-balancing method. dst-ip Specifies the load-balancing method using destination IP addresses.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) primary-interface (config) primary-interface To configure the primary interface for a WAAS device, use the primary-interface command in global configuration mode. To remove the configured primary interface, use the no form of the command. primary-interface {GigabitEthernet 1-2/port | PortChannel 1-2 | Standby group_num} Syntax Description GigabitEthernet Selects a Gigabit Ethernet interface as the primary interface of the WAAS device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) primary-interface Examples The following example shows how to specify the Gigabit Ethernet slot 1 port 0 as the primary interface on a WAAS device: WAE(config)# primary-interface GigabitEthernet 1/0 The following example shows how to specify the Gigabit Ethernet slot 2 port 0 as the primary interface on a WAAS device: WAE(config)# primary-interface GigabitEthernet 2/0 Related Commands (config) interface Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-342 OL-1
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) print-services (config) print-services To enable print services and designate a group name for administrators allowed configuration access on a WAAS device, use the print-services global configuration command. To disable print services on a WAAS device or to clear the administrative group, use the no form of this command. print-services {enable | admin-group admin-group-name | guest-print enable} Syntax Description enable Enables print services on the WAAS device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) print-services From the WAAS CLI, you can start and stop WAAS print services, configure a print services administrative group, and debug the print spooler. WAAS print services provide an alternative to Windows print services. Starting and Stopping Print Services When the print-services enable command is executed, the following sequence of events occurs: • The node manager starts the CUPS process (cupsd), checking every second for an updated timestamp in the printcap file.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) print-services You can delete a print services administrative group using the no print-services admin-group command. When this command is executed, the following events occur: • The smb.conf setting is cleared. If the clear fails, the old setting is restored and the error message “Failed to configure print-services admin group” is displayed. If the clear fails and the old setting cannot be restored, two error messages, “Failed to configure print-services admin group.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) radius-server (config) radius-server To configure a set of RADIUS authentication server settings on the WAAS device, use the radius-server command in global configuration mode. To disable RADIUS authentication server settings, use the no form of this command. radius-server {host hostname | hostipaddr [primary] | key keyword | retransmit retries | timeout seconds} Syntax Description Defaults host Specifies a RADIUS server. You can specify up to 5 servers.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) radius-server Note For more information about how the RADIUS protocol operates, refer to RFC 2138, Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS). RADIUS authentication usually occurs when an administrator first logs in to the WAAS device to configure the WAE for monitoring, configuration, or troubleshooting purposes. RADIUS authentication is disabled by default. You can enable RADIUS authentication and other authentication methods at the same time.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) smb-conf (config) smb-conf To manually configure the parameters for a WAAS device’s Samba configuration file, smb.conf, use the smb-conf global configuration command. To return a parameter to its default value, use the no form of this command. smb-conf section {global | print$ | printers} name attr-name value attr-value [service print] Syntax Description global Specifies one of the global print parameters. print$ Specifies one of the print$ parameters.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) smb-conf Table 3-92 Print-Related Parameters Parameter Name Default Value Parameter Description idmap uid 70000-200000 Range of user IDs allocated for mapping UNIX users to NT user SIDs. idmap gid 70000-200000 Range of group IDs allocated for mapping UNIX groups to NT group SIDs. winbind enum users no Do not enumerate domain users using MSRPC. winbind enum groups no Do not enumerate domain groups using MSRPC.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) smb-conf Table 3-92 Print-Related Parameters Parameter Name Default Value Parameter Description realm CISCO Active Directory domain name. Always uppercase. Can also be set by the windows-domain realm command. wins server 10.10.10.1 IP address of the Windows domain server used to authenticate user access to print services. Can also be set by the windows-domain wins-server command. password server 10.10.10.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) smb-conf Examples The following example shows how to change the maximum size of the Samba error log file from the default of 50 errors to 75 errors: WAE# smb-conf global max log size 75 The following example shows how to change the realm from the default of CISCO to MYCOMPANYNAME: WAE# smb-conf global realm MYCOMPANYNAME The following example shows how to enable and then disable LDAP server signing: WAE# smb-conf global name “ldap ssl” value “start_tls” Related Commands
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server access-list (config) snmp-server access-list To configure a standard access control list on a WAAS device to allow access through an SNMP agent, use the snmp-server access-list global configuration command. To remove a standard access control list, use the no form of this command. snmp-server access-list {num | name} Syntax Description num Standard access list number (1–99). name Standard access list name, up to a maximum of 30 characters.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server community (config) snmp-server community To enable the SNMP agent on a WAAS device and to set up the community access string to permit access to the SNMP agent, use the snmp-server community global configuration command. To disable the SNMP agent and remove the previously configured community string, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server community Examples The following example enables the SNMP agent and assigns the community string comaccess to SNMP: WAE(config)# snmp-server community comaccess The following example disables the SNMP agent and removes the previously defined community string: WAE(config)# no snmp-server community Related Commands (config) snmp-server community (config) snmp-server contact (config) snmp-server enable traps (config) snmp-server group (config) snmp-server host (
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server contact (config) snmp-server contact To set the system server contact string on a WAAS device, use the snmp-server contact global configuration command. To remove the system contact information, use the no form of this command. snmp-server contact line Syntax Description contact Specifies text for MIB-II object sysContact. line Identification of the contact person for this managed node.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server enable traps (config) snmp-server enable traps To enable the WAAS device to send SNMP traps, use the snmp-server enable traps global configuration command. To disable all SNMP traps or only SNMP authentication traps, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server enable traps Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines You can configure a WAAS device to generate an SNMP trap for a specific alarm condition. You can configure the generation of SNMP alarm traps on the WAAS device based on the following: • The severity of the alarm (critical, major, or minor) • The action (the alarm is raised or cleared).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server enable traps Related Commands (config) snmp-server community (config) snmp-server contact (config) snmp-server group (config) snmp-server host (config) snmp-server location (config) snmp-server mib (config) snmp-server notify inform (config) snmp-server user (config) snmp-server view snmp trigger Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-358 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server group (config) snmp-server group To define a user security model group for a WAAS device, use the snmp-server group global configuration command. To remove the specified group, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server group Examples The following example defines a user security model group named acme that uses SNMP version 1 security model and a view name of mymib for notifications: WAE(config)# snmp-server group acme v1 notify mymib Related Commands (config) snmp-server community (config) snmp-server contact (config) snmp-server enable traps (config) snmp-server host (config) snmp-server location (config) snmp-server mib (config) snmp-server notify inform (config) snmp-ser
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server host (config) snmp-server host To specify the recipient of a host SNMP trap operation, use the snmp-server host global configuration command. To remove the specified host, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server host Usage Guidelines If you do not enter an snmp-server host command, no traps are sent. To configure the WAAS device to send SNMP traps, you must enter at least one snmp-server host command. To enable multiple hosts, you must issue a separate snmp-server host command for each host. The maximum number of snmp-server host commands is four. When multiple snmp-server host commands are given for the same host, the community string in the last command is used.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server location (config) snmp-server location To set the SNMP system location string on a WAAS device, use the snmp-server location global configuration command. To remove the location string, use the no form of this command. snmp-server location line Syntax Description location Specifies text for MIB-II object sysLocation. line String that describes the physical location of this node. Defaults No system location string is set.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server mib (config) snmp-server mib To configure persistence for the SNMP Event MIB, use the snmp-server mib global configuration command. To disable the Event MIB, use the no form of this command. snmp-server mib persist event Syntax Description persist Configures MIB persistence. event Enables MIB persistence for the Event MIB.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server mib Downloading MIB Files to WAEs From the following Cisco FTP site you can download the MIB files for all of the MIBS that are supported by a WAAS device that is running WAAS software: ftp://ftp.cisco.com/pub/mibs/v2 The MIB objects that are defined in each MIB are described in the MIB files at the above FTP site are self explanatory.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server notify inform (config) snmp-server notify inform To configure the SNMP notify inform request on WAAS device, use the snmp-server notify inform global configuration command. To return the setting to the default value, use the no form of this command. snmp-server notify inform Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults If you do not issue the snmp-server notify inform command, the default is an SNMP trap request.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server user (config) snmp-server user To define a user who can access the SNMP server, use the snmp-server user global configuration command. To remove access, use the no form of this command. snmp-server user name group [auth {md5 password [priv password] | sha password [priv password]} | remote octetstring [auth {md5 password [priv password] | sha password [priv password]}]] Syntax Description name Name of the SNMP user.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server user Usage Guidelines Examples When defining SNMP users for WAAS devices, note the following: • If the SNMPv3 protocol is going to be used for SNMP requests, you must define at least one SNMPv3 user account on the WAAS device for the WAAS device to be accessed through SNMP. • A group defined with the SNMPv1 or SNMPv2c security model should not be associated with SNMP users; they should only be associated with the community strings.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) snmp-server view (config) snmp-server view To define a SNMPv2 MIB view on a WAAS device, use the snmp-server view global configuration command. To remove the MIB view definition, use the no form of this command. snmp-server view viewname MIBfamily {excluded | included} Syntax Description viewname Name of this family of view subtrees. You can enter a maximum of 64 characters. MIBfamily Object identifier that identifies a subtree of the MIB.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) sshd (config) sshd To enable the SSH daemon on a WAAS device, use the sshd command in global configuration mode. To disable the SSH daemon on a WAAS device, use the no form of this command. sshd {allow-non-admin-users | enable | password-guesses number | timeout seconds | version {1 | 2}} Syntax Description allow-non-admin-users Allows nonadministrative users to gain SSH access to the chosen device (or device group). By default, this option is disabled.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) sshd Usage Guidelines SSH enables login access to the WAAS device through a secure and encrypted channel. SSH consists of a server and a client program. Like Telnet, you can use the client program to remotely log on to a machine that is running the SSH server, but unlike Telnet, messages transported between the client and the server are encrypted. The functionality of SSH includes user authentication, message encryption, and message authentication.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) sshd Examples The following example enables and configures a Secure Shell daemon on the WAAS device: WAE(config)# sshd enable WAE(config)# sshd password-guesses 4 WAE(config)# sshd timeout 20 The following example disables the support for SSH Version 1 in the WAAS device: WAE(config)# no sshd version 1 Related Commands (config) ssh-key-generate Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-372 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) ssh-key-generate (config) ssh-key-generate To generate the SSH host key for a WAAS device, use the ssh-key-generate global configuration command. To remove the SSH key, use the no form of the command. ssh-key-generate [key-length length] Syntax Description key-length (Optional) Configures the length of the SSH key. length Number of bits to create an SSH key (512–2048).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tacacs (config) tacacs To configure TACACS+ server parameters on a WAAS device, use the tacacs command in global configuration mode. To disable individual options, use the no form of this command. tacacs {host {hostname | ip-address} [primary] | key keyword | password ascii | retransmit retries | timeout seconds} Syntax Description Defaults host Specifies a server address. hostname Hostname of the TACACS+ server. ip-address IP address of the TACACS+ server.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tacacs The TACACS+ remote database can also be used to maintain login and configuration privileges for administrative users. The tacacs host command allows you to configure the network parameters required to access the remote database. Use the tacacs key command to specify the TACACS+ key, used to encrypt the packets transmitted to the server. This key must be the same as the one specified on the server daemon.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tacacs Timeout = 5 Retransmit = 2 Password type: pap Server ---------------------------10.107.192.148 10.107.192.168 10.77.140.77 Status -----primary You can configure the password type to be ASCII using the tacacs password ascii command. You can then verify the changes using the show tacacs command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tcp (config) tcp To configure TCP parameters on a WAAS device, use the tcp global configuration command. To disable TCP parameters, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tcp Defaults low-water-mark Specifies the memory usage mark (in megabytes) below which TCP goes out of the memory pressure mode and enters into the normal memory allocation mode. low Memory usage in megabytes (4–600). high-water-markpressure Specifies the memory usage mark (in megabytes) above which TCP goes out of the normal memory allocation mode and enters the memory pressure mode. high Memory usage in megabytes (5–610).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tcp Use the tcp keepalive-timeout global configuration command to wait for a response (the device does not respond) before the WAAS device logs a miss. The timeout can be from 1 to 120 seconds. The default is 90 seconds.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) telnet enable (config) telnet enable To enable Telnet on a WAAS device, use the telnet enable global configuration command. telnet enable Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults By default, the Telnet service is enabled on a WAAS device. Command Modes global configuration Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use terminal emulation software to start a Telnet session with a WAAS device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tfo auto-discovery (config) tfo auto-discovery To configure a WAE to automatically discover origin servers (such as those servers behind firewalls) that cannot receive TCP packets with setup options and add these server IP addresses to a blacklist for a specified number of minutes, use the tfo auto-discovery global configuration command. To disable TFO auto-discovery, use the no form of this command .
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tfo optimize (config) tfo optimize To configure a WAE for Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO), use the tfo optimize global configuration command. Use the no form of this command to disable TFO optimization. tfo optimize {DRE {yes | no} compression {LZ | none} | full} Syntax Description DRE Configures TFO optimization with or without Data Redundancy Elimination (DRE). yes Enables DRE. no Disables DRE.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tfo tcp keepalive (config) tfo tcp keepalive To configure a WAE for Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) optimization with TCP keepalive, use the tfo tcp keepalive global configuration command. tfo tcp keepalive Defaults Keepalive is disabled by default. Command Modes global configuration Device Modes application-accelerator Usage Guidelines This command enables TCP keepalive on the TFO optimized sockets (the connection between two peer WAE’s).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tfo tcp optimized-mss (config) tfo tcp optimized-mss To configure a WAE for Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) optimization with an optimized-side TCP maximum segment size, use the tfo tcp optimized-mss global configuration command. tfo tcp optimized-mss segment-size Syntax Description segment-size Defaults The default value of the segment size is 1432 bytes.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tfo tcp optimized-receive-buffer (config) tfo tcp optimized-receive-buffer To configure a WAE for Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) optimization with an optimized-side receive buffer, use the tfo tcp optimized-receive-buffer global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tfo tcp optimized-send-buffer (config) tfo tcp optimized-send-buffer To configure a WAE for Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) optimization with an optimized-side send buffer, use the tfo tcp optimized-send-buffer global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tfo tcp original-mss (config) tfo tcp original-mss To configure a WAE for Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) optimization with an unoptimized-side TCP maximum segment size, use the tfo tcp original-mss global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tfo tcp original-receive-buffer (config) tfo tcp original-receive-buffer To configure a WAE for Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) optimization with an unoptimized-side receive buffer, use the tfo tcp original-receive-buffer global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) tfo tcp original-send-buffer (config) tfo tcp original-send-buffer To configure a WAE for Traffic Flow Optimization (TFO) optimization with an unoptimized-side send buffer, use the tfo tcp original-send-buffer global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) transaction-logs (config) transaction-logs To configure and enable transaction logging on a WAE, use the transaction-logs global configuration command. To disable a transaction logging option, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) transaction-logs parameter Specifies one of the following facilities: auth Authorization system daemon System daemons kern Kernel local0 Local use local1 Local use local2 Local use local3 Local use local4 Local use local5 Local use local6 Local use local7 Local use mail Mail system news USENET news syslog Syslog itself user User process uucp UUCP system host Configures the remote syslog server.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) transaction-logs hours Number of hours for daily file archive. 1 12 2 24 3 4 6 8 Hourly Every 12 hours Every 2 hours Every 24 hours Every 3 hours Every 4 hours Every 6 hours Every 8 hours every-hour Specifies the archives using intervals of 1 hour or less. at Sets the time to archive at each hour. minute Minute alignment for the hourly archive (0–59). every Specifies the interval in minutes for hourly archive that aligns with the top of the hour.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) transaction-logs login User login to target FTP server. passw User password to target FTP server. directory Target directory path for exported files on FTP server. interval Specifies the interval at which the working log should be cleared by moving data to the FTP server. minutes Number of minutes in the interval at which to export a file (1–10080). every-day Specifies the exports using intervals of 1 day or less.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) transaction-logs Defaults servipaddrs IP address of the target SFTP server. login User login to the target SFTP server (less than 40 characters). passw User password to the target SFTP server (less than 40 characters). directory Target directory path for exported files on the SFTP server.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) transaction-logs syslog server. You can limit the rate at which the transaction logging module is allowed to send messages to the remote syslog server. The format of the syslog message is in standard syslog message format with the transaction log message as the payload of the syslog message. Real-time transaction logging to a remote syslog server uses the standard syslog message format with the message payload as the transaction log entry.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) transaction-logs where ce-host is the host name of the WAE that sent the real-time transaction log message to the remote syslog server. The configuration of host settings for transaction logs is identical to the configuration settings for syslog messages except that you need not specify the priority level of the message for real time transaction logs. All messages are associated with the priority level of 6 (LOG_INFO).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) username (config) username To establish username authentication on a WAAS device, use the username global configuration command. username name {password {0 plainword | 1 cryptoword | plainword} [uid uid] | print-admin-password {0 plainword | 1 cryptoword plainword | plainword} | privilege {0 | 15}} Syntax Description name Username. password Specifies the password for the user. 0 Specifies an unencrypted user password. plainword Clear-text user password.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) username Usage Guidelines A system administrator can log in to a WAAS device that is functioning as a Core or Edge WAE through the console port or the WAE Device Manager GUI. An administrator can log in to the WAAS Central Manager through the console port or the WAAS Central Manager GUI.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) username User Authentication User access is controlled at the authentication level. For every HTTP request, including every WAAS CLI request, that arrives at the WAAS device, the authentication level has visibility into the supplied username and password. Based on CLI-configured parameters, a decision is then made to either accept or reject the request.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp access-list (config) wccp access-list To configure an IP access list on a WAE for inbound WCCP GRE encapsulated traffic, use the wccp access-list global configuration command. wccp access-list {acl-number | ext-acl-number | acl-name} Syntax Description acl-number Standard IP access list number (1–99). ext-acl-number Extended IP access list number (100–199). acl-name Name of the access list (30 characters maximum).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp access-list Standard IP access list 98 1 permit any (implicit deny any: 0 matches) total invocations: 0 Extended IP access list 100 1 permit icmp any any (implicit fragment permit: 0 matches) (implicit deny ip any any: 0 matches) total invocations: 0 Extended IP access list 101 1 permit ip any any (implicit fragment permit: 0 matches) (implicit deny ip any any: 0 matches) total invocations: 0 Extended IP access list 102 1 permit icmp 0.0.1.1 255.255.0.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp access-list The following example shows sample output from the show wccp gre EXEC command when WCCP access lists are defined on the WAE: WAE# show wccp gre Transparent GRE packets received: Transparent non-GRE packets received: Transparent non-GRE packets passed through: Total packets accepted: Invalid packets received: Packets received with invalid service: Packets received on a disabled service: Packets received too small: Packets dropped due to zero TTL: Packets drop
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp flow-redirect (config) wccp flow-redirect To enable WCCP flow redirection on a WAE, use the wccp flow-redirect global configuration command. To disable flow redirection, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp router-list (config) wccp router-list To configure a router list for WCCP Version 2, use the wccp router-list global configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command. wccp router-list number ip-address Syntax Description number Router list number (1–8). ip-address IP address of router to add to the list.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp shutdown (config) wccp shutdown To set the maximum time interval after which the WAE will perform a clean shutdown of WCCP, use the wccp shutdown global configuration command. To disable the clean shutdown, use the no form of the command. wccp shutdown max-wait seconds Syntax Description max-wait Sets the clean shutdown time interval. seconds Time in seconds (0–86400). The default is 120 seconds.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp shutdown Examples The following example shows how to configure the WAE to wait 1000 seconds: WAE(config)# wccp shutdown max-wait 1000 The following example shows how to shut down WCCP Version 2 on the WAE by entering the no wccp version 2 command. In this case, after you enter the no wccp version 2 command, the WAE waits 1000 seconds before it shuts down WCCP Version 2.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp slow-start (config) wccp slow-start To enable the slow-start capability of the caching service on the WAE, use the wccp slow-start global configuration command. To disable slow-start capability, use the no form of this command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp slow-start Examples The following example shows how to enable the slow-start capability of the caching service on a WAE: WAE(config)# wccp slow-start enable The following example shows how to disable the slow-start capability of the caching service on a WAE: WAE(config)# no wccp slow-start enable Related Commands (config) wccp flow-redirect Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-408 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp tcp-promiscuous (config) wccp tcp-promiscuous To configure the Web Cache Coordination Protocol (WCCP) Version 2 TCP promiscuous mode service (WCCP Version 2 services 61 and 62) on a WAE, use the wccp tcp-promiscuous global configuration command.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp tcp-promiscuous weight (Optional) Specifies that a weight percentage be used. The weight represents a percentage of the total load redirected to the device for load-balancing purposes (for example, a WAE with a weight of 30 receives 30 percent of the total load). weight Weight percentage. The weight value ranges from 0 to 100%. By default, weights are not assigned and the traffic load is distributed evenly between the WAEs in a service groups.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp version (config) wccp version To specify the version of WCCP that the WAE should use, enter the wccp version global configuration command. To disable the currently running version, use the no form of the command. wccp version 2 Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) wccp version Examples The following example shows how to enable WCCP Version 2 on a WAE: WAE(config)# wccp version 2 Related Commands (config) wccp tcp-promiscuous (config) wccp router-list Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-412 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) windows-domain (config) windows-domain To configure Windows domain server options on a WAAS device, use the windows-domain global configuration command. windows-domain {administrative group {normal-user | super-user} groupname | comment string | netbios-name name | password-server {hostname | ipaddress} | realm kerberos-realm | wins-server {hostname | ipaddress} | workgroup name | security ADS} Syntax Description administrative Sets administrative options.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config) windows-domain Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines Use this global configuration command to set the Windows domain server parameters for a WAAS device. When Kerberos authentication is enabled, the default realm is DOMAIN.COM and the security is ADS. If Kerberos authentication is disabled, security is domain. Examples The following example shows how to configure the Windows domain server at 10.10.24.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands Interface Configuration Mode Commands Use the interface configuration mode for setting, viewing, and testing the configuration of WAAS software features on a specific interface. To enter this mode, enter the interface command from the global configuration mode.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) autosense (config-if) autosense To enable autosense on an interface, use the autosense interface configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command. autosense Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords. Defaults Autosense is enabled by default.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) bandwidth (config-if) bandwidth To configure the link speed on a network interface, use the bandwidth interface configuration command. To restore default values, use the no form of this command. bandwidth {10 | 100 | 1000} Syntax Description 10 Sets the link speed to 10 megabits per second (Mbps). 100 Sets the link speed to 100 Mbps. 1000 Sets the link speed to 1000 Mbps. This option is not available on all ports and is the same as autosense.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) bandwidth Related Commands (config-if) autosense (config) interface Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-418 OL-11817-01
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) cdp (config-if) cdp To enable the Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) on a particular interface on a WAAS device, rather than on all interfaces, use the cdp command in interface configuration mode. cdp enable Syntax Description enable Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes interface configuration Device Modes application-accelerator Enables CDP on an interface.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) exit (config-if) exit To terminate interface configuration mode and return to the global configuration mode, use the exit command. exit Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) failover timeout (config-if) failover timeout To set the maximum time for the inline interface to transition traffic to another port after a failure event, use the failover timeout command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command. failover timeout {1 | 3 | 5} Syntax Description 1 Specifies the number of seconds to a failover. 3 Specifies the number of seconds to a failover. 5 Specifies the number of seconds to a failover.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) full-duplex (config-if) full-duplex To configure an interface for full-duplex operation on a WAAS device, use the full-duplex interface configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command. full-duplex Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) half-duplex (config-if) half-duplex To configure an interface for half-duplex operation on a WAAS device, use the half-duplex interface configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command. half-duplex Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) inline (config-if) inline To enable inline interception for an inlineGroup interface, use the inline interface configuration command. To disable inline interception, use the no form of this command. inline [vlan {all | native | vlan_list}] Syntax Description vlan (Optional) Modifies the VLAN list parameters. all Applies the command to all tagged and untagged packets. native Specifies untagged packets.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) inline (config)# interface inlineGroup 1/0 (config-if)# no inline vlan 5,10-15 (config-if)# exit The following example shows how to enable inline interception for all untagged traffic and traffic only on VLANs 0 through 100 on the ports in group 1 in slot 2: (config)# interface inlineGroup 2/1 (config-if)# no inline vlan 101-4095 (config-if)# exit The following example shows how to enable inline interception for traffic only on VLAN 395 on the ports in group 1 in slot 2
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) ip (config-if) ip To configure the IP address or subnet mask, or to negotiate an IP address from DHCP on the interface of the WAAS device, use the ip interface configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command. ip address {ip-address ip-subnet [secondary] | dhcp [client-id id [hostname name] | hostname name [client-id id]]} Syntax Description address Sets the IP address of an interface. ip-address IP address. ip-subnet IP subnet mask.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) ip Note No two interfaces can have IP addresses in the same subnet. Use the ip-address dhcp command to negotiate a reusable IP address from DHCP. Examples The following example shows how to configure the port channel interface with an IP address of 10.10.10.10 and a netmask of 255.0.0.0: WAE# configure WAE(config)# interface PortChannel 2 WAE(config-if)# ip address 10.10.10.10 255.0.0.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) ip access-group (config-if) ip access-group To control connections on a specific interface of a WAAS device by applying a predefined access list, use the ip access-group interface configuration command. To disable an access list, use the no form of the command. ip access-group {acl-name | acl-num} {in | out} Syntax Description acl-name Alphanumeric identifier of up to 30 characters, beginning with a letter that identifies the ACL to apply to the current interface.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) mtu (config-if) mtu To set the interface Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) packet size, use the mtu interface configuration command. Use the no form of this command to reset the MTU packet size. mtu mtusize Syntax Description mtusize Defaults No default behavior or values Command Modes interface configuration Device Modes application-accelerator MTU packet size in bytes (88–1500).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) no (config-if) no To negate a Gigabit Ethernet interface configuration command or set its defaults, use the following no command from GigabitEthernet interface configuration mode.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) no ip Interface Internet Protocol Config commands mtu Set the interface Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) shutdown Shutdown the specific interface standby Standby interface config commands WAE(config-if)# no However, if you are in Standby interface configuration mode, there are only 4 options for the no command: WAE(config)# interface standby 4 WAE(config-if)# no ? description Standby interface description errors Set the maximum number of errors allowed on this interface i
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) shutdown (config-if) shutdown To shut down a specific hardware interface on a WAAS device, use the shutdown interface configuration command. To restore an interface to operation, use the no form of this command. shutdown Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) standby (config-if) standby To configure an interface on a WAAS device to be a backup for another interface, use the standby command in interface configuration mode. Use the no form of the command to restore the default configuration of the interface. standby group_number {description text | errors max-errors | ip ip-address netmask | priority priority_level | shutdown} Syntax Description group_number Standby group number (1–4).
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) standby Device Modes application-accelerator central-manager Usage Guidelines You can configure one or more interfaces to act as a backup interface (a standby interface) for another interface on a WAAS device. This feature is called “standby interface support.” Standby groups, which are logical groups of interfaces, are used to implement this feature.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) standby Note Examples Interface IP addresses and standby group IP addresses must be on different subnets to ensure reliable operation. You can use dummy IP addresses in the private address space to serve as interface primary IP addresses, and use the real WAAS device’s IP address to serve as the standby group IP address in a different subnet to satisfy this requirement.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) standby Member interfaces: none Active interface: Gigabit Ethernet 1/0 Maximum errors allowed on the active interface: 500 Note To display information about a specific standby group configuration, enter the show interface standby group_number EXEC command. The following example creates a standby group, Standby Group 1: WAE# configure WAE(config)# interface standby 1 WAE(config-if)# The following example assigns a group IP address of 10.10.10.10 and a netmask of 255.0.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-if) standby WAE(config-if)# exit WAE(config)# interface standby 1 WAE(config-if)# no ip address 10.10.10.10 255.0.0.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands Standard ACL Configuration Mode Commands To create and modify standard access lists on a WAAS device for controlling access to interfaces or applications, use the ip access-list standard global configuration command. To disable a standard access list, use the no form of the command. ip access-list standard {acl-name | acl-num} Syntax Description standard Enables standard ACL configuration mode.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands To create an entry, use a deny or permit keyword and specify the type of packets that you want the WAAS device to drop or to accept for further processing. By default, an access list denies everything because the list is terminated by an implicit deny any entry. Therefore, you must include at least one permit entry to create a valid access list.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands . . . ip access-list standard teststdacl permit 192.168.1.0 any exit . . .
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-std-nacl) delete (config-std-nacl) delete To delete a line from the standard IP ACL, use the delete command. delete line-num Syntax Description line-num Command Modes Standard ACL configuration mode Device Modes application-accelerator Entry at a specific line number in the access list.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-std-nacl) deny (config-std-nacl) deny To add a line to a standard access-list that specifies the type of packets that you want the WAAS device to drop, use the deny command. [insert line-num] deny {source-ip [wildcard] | host source-ip | any} To negate a standard IP ACL, use the following syntax. no deny {source-ip [wildcard] | host source-ip | any} Syntax Description insert (Optional) Inserts the conditions following the specified line number into the access list.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-std-nacl) deny To allow connections from a specific network, use the permit host source-ip wildcard option. Replace source-ip with a network ID or the IP address of any host on the network that you want to specify. Replace wildcard with the dotted decimal notation for a mask that is the reverse of a subnet mask, where a 0 indicates a position that must be matched and a 1 indicates a position that does not matter. For instance, the wildcard 0.0.0.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-std-nacl) exit (config-std-nacl) exit To terminate standard ACL configuration mode and return to the global configuration mode, use the exit command. exit Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-std-nacl) list (config-std-nacl) list To display a list of specified entries within the standard IP ACL, use the list command. list [start-line-num [end-line-num]] Syntax Description start-line-num (Optional) Line number from which the list begins. end-line-num (Optional) Last line number in the list.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-std-nacl) move (config-std-nacl) move To move a line to a new position within the standard IP ACL, use the move command. move old-line-num new-line-num Syntax Description old-line-num Line number of the entry to move. new-line-num New position of the entry. The existing entry is moved to the following position in the access list.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-std-nacl) permit (config-std-nacl) permit To add a line to a standard access-list that specifies the type of packets that you want the WAAS device to accept for further processing, use the permit command. [insert line-num] permit {source-ip [wildcard] | host source-ip | any} To negate a standard IP ACL, use the following syntax.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-std-nacl) permit To allow connections from a specific network, use the permit host source-ip wildcard option. Replace source-ip with a network ID or the IP address of any host on the network that you want to specify. Replace wildcard with the dotted decimal notation for a mask that is the reverse of a subnet mask, where a 0 indicates a position that must be matched and a 1 indicates a position that does not matter. For instance, the wildcard 0.0.0.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands Extended ACL Configuration Mode Commands To create and modify extended access lists on a WAAS device for controlling access to interfaces or applications, use the ip access-list extended global configuration command. To disable an extended access list, use the no form of the command. ip access-list extended {acl-name | acl-num} Syntax Description extended Enables extended ACL configuration mode.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands Note • An application layer proxy firewall with a hardened outside interface has no ports exposed. (Hardened means that the interface carefully restricts which ports are available for access, primarily for security reasons. With an outside interface, many types of security attacks are possible.) The WAE's outside address is Internet global, and its inside address is private. The inside interface has an ACL to limit Telnet, SSH, and WAAS GUI access to the device.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands Examples The following commands create an access list on the WAAS device. You create this access list to allow the WAAS device to accept all web traffic that is redirected to it, but limits host administrative access using SSH: WAE(config)# ip access-list extended testextacl WAE(config-ext-nacl)# permit tcp any any eq www WAE(config-ext-nacl)# permit tcp host 10.1.1.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) delete (config-ext-nacl) delete To delete a line from the extended ACL, use the delete command. delete line-num Syntax Description line-num Command Modes Extended ACL configuration mode Device Modes application-accelerator Entry at a specific line number in the access list.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) deny (config-ext-nacl) deny To add a line to an extended access list that specifies the type of packets that you want the WAAS device to drop, use the deny command. To add a condition to the extended ACL, note that the options depend on the chosen protocol.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) deny wildcard (Optional) Portions of the preceding IP address to match, expressed using 4-digit, dotted-decimal notation. Bits to match are identified by a digital value of 0; bits to ignore are identified by a 1. Note For extended IP ACLs, the wildcard parameter of the ip access-list command is always optional. If the host keyword is specified for a extended IP ACL, then the wildcard parameter is not allowed. host Matches the following IP address.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) deny To allow connections from a specific network, use the permit host source-ip wildcard option. Replace source-ip with a network ID or the IP address of any host on the network that you want to specify. Replace wildcard with the dotted decimal notation for a mask that is the reverse of a subnet mask, where a 0 indicates a position that must be matched and a 1 indicates a position that does not matter. For instance, the wildcard 0.0.0.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) deny Table 3-94 TCP Keywords for Extended Access Lists (continued) CLI TCP Keyword Description TCP Port Number nfs Network File System service 2049 ssh Secure Shell login 22 tacacs Terminal Access Controller Access Control System 49 telnet Telnet 23 www World Wide Web (HTTP) 80 Table 3-95 lists the keywords that you can use to match specific ICMP message types and codes.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) deny The following example shows how this configuration appears when you enter the show running-configuration command: ... ! interface GigabitEthernet 1/0 ip address 10.1.1.50 255.255.0.0 ip access-group extended testextacl in exit . . . ip access-list extended testextacl permit tcp any any eq www permit tcp host 10.1.1.5 any eq ssh exit . . .
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) exit (config-ext-nacl) exit To terminate extended ACL configuration mode and return to the global configuration mode, use the exit command. exit Syntax Description This command has no arguments or keywords.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) list (config-ext-nacl) list To display a list of specified entries within the extended ACL, use the list command. list [start-line-num [end-line-num]] Syntax Description start-line-num (Optional) Line number from which the list begins. end-line-num (Optional) Last line number in the list.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) move (config-ext-nacl) move To move a line to a new position within the extended ACL, use the move command. move old-line-num new-line-num Syntax Description old-line-num Line number of the entry to move. new-line-num New position of the entry. The existing entry is moved to the following position in the access list.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) permit (config-ext-nacl) permit To add a line to an extended access-list that specifies the type of packets that you want the WAAS device to accept for further processing, use the permit command. To add a condition to the extended ACL, note that the options depend on the chosen protocol.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) permit wildcard (Optional) Portions of the preceding IP address to match, expressed using 4-digit, dotted-decimal notation. Bits to match are identified by a digital value of 0; bits to ignore are identified by a 1. Note For extended IP ACLs, the wildcard parameter of the ip access-list command is always optional. If the host keyword is specified for a extended IP ACL, then the wildcard parameter is not allowed. host Matches the following IP address.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) permit instance, the wildcard 0.0.0.255 causes the last eight bits in the source IP address to be ignored. Therefore, the permit 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.255 entry allows access from any host on the 192.168.1.0 network. For extended IP ACLs, the wildcard parameter is required if the host keyword is not specified. Use an extended access list to control connections based on the destination IP address or based on the protocol type.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) permit Table 3-97 TCP Keywords for Extended Access Lists (continued) CLI TCP Keyword Description TCP Port Number tacacs Terminal Access Controller Access Control System 49 telnet Telnet 23 www World Wide Web (HTTP) 80 Table 3-98 lists the keywords that you can use to match specific ICMP message types and codes.
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) permit interface GigabitEthernet 1/0 ip address 10.1.1.50 255.255.0.0 ip access-group testextacl in exit . . . ip access-list extended testextacl permit tcp any any eq www permit tcp host 10.1.1.5 any eq ssh exit . . .
Chapter 3 CLI Commands (config-ext-nacl) permit Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference 3-466 OL-11817-01
A P P E N D I X A Acronyms and Abbreviations Table A-1 defines the acronyms and abbreviations that are used in this publication.
Appendix A Table A-1 Acronyms and Abbreviations List of Acronyms and Abbreviations (continued) Acronym Expansion KDC key distribution center LDAP Lightweight Directory Access Protocol MAC Media Access Control Mbps megabits per second MD5 Message Digest 5 MIB Management Information Base MSRPC Microsoft Remote Procedure Call MTU maximum transmission unit NAS network access server/network attached storage NetBIOS Network Basic Input/Output System NMS Network Management system NTP N
Appendix A Acronyms and Abbreviations Table A-1 List of Acronyms and Abbreviations (continued) Acronym Expansion TDB Trivial DataBase TFTP Trivial File Transfer Protocol ToS type of service UDI unique device identifier UDP User Datagram Protocol UPS uninterruptible power supply USB Universal Serial Bus UTC Coordinated Universal Time UUCP Unix-to-Unix Copy Program VID version ID WAE Wide Area Application Engine WAAS Wide Area Application Services WAFSFS Wide Area File Services
Appendix A Acronyms and Abbreviations Cisco Wide Area Application Services Command Reference A-4 OL-11817-01
CLI COMMAND SUMMARY BY MODE (config) policy-engine application map adaptor EPM 3-321 Configuration Mode Commands (config) aaa accounting (config) adapter 3-256 (config) alarm overload-detect (config) asset (config) policy-engine application map adaptor WAFS transport 3-323 3-252 (config) policy-engine application map basic delete 3-325 3-257 3-259 (config) authentication (config) auto-register (config) banner 3-268 (config) bypass 3-271 (config) cdp (config) policy-engine application map basic
Index (config) snmp-server mib copy ftp 3-364 (config) snmp-server notify inform (config) snmp-server user (config) sshd copy sysreport copy tftp 3-377 (config) tfo optimize 3-380 3-381 3-382 (config) tfo tcp keepalive 3-383 (config) tfo tcp optimized-mss (config) tfo tcp optimized-send-buffer (config) tfo tcp original-mss 3-386 (config) tfo tcp original-send-buffer 3-388 3-389 debug 3-32 delfile 3-38 deltree 3-39 disable disk (config) wccp flow-redirect 3-42 3-43 enable exit 3
Index show arp show statistics dre peer 3-81 show authentication show statistics epm 3-82 show auto-register 3-161 show statistics icmp 3-84 3-158 3-162 show banner 3-85 show statistics ip show bypass 3-86 show statistics netstat 3-167 show statistics radius 3-168 show cdp 3-87 show clock show cms 3-164 show statistics services 3-93 show statistics snmp 3-95 show debugging show device-mode 3-99 3-173 show statistics tcp 3-175 3-179 show disks 3-101 show statistics tfo s
Index traceroute 3-234 transaction-log type Standard ACL Configuration Mode Commands 3-235 3-236 type-tail 3-237 (config-std-nacl) delete undebug 3-239 (config-std-nacl) deny wafs (config-std-nacl) exit 3-244 whoami (config-std-nacl) list 3-246 windows-domain write 3-441 3-442 3-444 3-445 (config-std-nacl) move 3-247 (config-std-nacl) permit 3-250 3-446 3-447 Extended ACL Configuration Mode Commands (config-ext-nacl) delete 3-452 (config-ext-nacl) deny (config-ext-nacl) exit (co