Reference Guide
Table Of Contents
- OS10 Enterprise Edition User Guide Release 10.3.1E
- Getting Started
- Download OS10 image and license
- Installation
- Log into OS10
- Install OS10 license
- Remote access
- Upgrade OS10
- CLI Basics
- User accounts
- Key CLI features
- CLI command modes
- CLI command hierarchy
- CLI command categories
- CONFIGURATION Mode
- Command help
- Check device status
- Candidate configuration
- Change to transaction-based configuration
- Back up or restore configuration
- Reload system image
- Filter show commands
- Alias command
- Batch mode commands
- Linux shell commands
- SSH commands
- OS9 environment commands
- Common commands
- alias
- batch
- boot
- commit
- configure
- copy
- delete
- dir
- discard
- do
- feature config-os9-style
- exit
- license
- lock
- management route
- move
- no
- reload
- show alias
- show boot
- show candidate-configuration
- show environment
- show inventory
- show ip management-route
- show ipv6 management-route
- show license status
- show running-configuration
- show startup-configuration
- show system
- show version
- start
- system
- system identifier
- terminal
- traceroute
- unlock
- write
- Interfaces
- Ethernet interfaces
- Unified port groups
- L2 mode configuration
- L3 mode configuration
- Fibre Channel interfaces
- Management interface
- VLAN interfaces
- Loopback interfaces
- Port-channel interfaces
- Create port-channel
- Add port member
- Minimum links
- Assign Port Channel IP Address
- Remove or disable port-channel
- Load balance traffic
- Change hash algorithm
- Configure interface ranges
- Energy-efficient Ethernet
- Forward error correction
- Switch-port profiles
- View interface configuration
- Interface commands
- channel-group
- description (Interface)
- duplex
- fec
- interface breakout
- interface ethernet
- interface loopback
- interface mgmt
- interface null
- interface port-channel
- interface range
- interface vlan
- link-bundle-utilization
- mgmt
- mode
- mtu
- port-group
- show interface
- show link-bundle-utilization
- show port-channel summary
- show port-group
- show switch-port-profile
- show vlan
- shutdown
- speed (Fibre Channel)
- speed (Management)
- switch-port-profile
- switchport access vlan
- switchport mode
- switchport trunk allowed vlan
- Fibre channel
- Layer 2
- 802.1X
- Link aggregation control protocol
- Link layer discovery protocol
- Protocol data units
- Optional TLVs
- Organizationally-specific TLVs
- Media endpoint discovery
- Network connectivity device
- LLDP-MED capabilities TLV
- Network policies TLVs
- Define network policies
- Packet timer values
- Disable and re-enable LLDP
- Advertise TLVs
- Network policy advertisement
- Fast start repeat count
- View LLDP configuration
- Adjacent agent advertisements
- Time to live
- LLDP commands
- Media Access Control
- Multiple spanning-tree protocol
- Rapid per-VLAN spanning-tree plus
- Rapid spanning-tree protocol
- Virtual LANs
- Port monitoring
- Layer 3
- Border gateway protocol
- Sessions and peers
- Route reflectors
- Multiprotocol BGP
- Attributes
- Selection criteria
- Weight and local preference
- Multiexit discriminators
- Origin
- AS path and next-hop
- Best path selection
- More path support
- Advertise cost
- 4-Byte AS numbers
- AS number migration
- Configure border gateway protocol
- Enable BGP
- Configure Dual Stack
- Peer templates
- Neighbor fall-over
- Fast external fallover
- Passive peering
- Local AS
- AS number limit
- Redistribute routes
- Additional paths
- MED attributes
- Local preference attribute
- Weight attribute
- Enable multipath
- Route-map filters
- Route reflector clusters
- Aggregate routes
- Confederations
- Route dampening
- Timers
- Neighbor soft-reconfiguration
- BGP commands
- Equal cost multi-path
- IPv4 routing
- IPv6 routing
- Open shortest path first
- Object tracking manager
- Policy-based routing
- Virtual router redundancy protocol
- Border gateway protocol
- System management
- Access Control Lists
- IP ACLs
- MAC ACLs
- IP fragment handling
- L3 ACL rules
- Assign sequence number to filter
- L2 and L3 ACLs
- Assign and apply ACL filters
- Ingress ACL filters
- Egress ACL filters
- Clear access-list counters
- IP prefix-lists
- Route-maps
- Match routes
- Set conditions
- continue Clause
- ACL flow-based monitoring
- Enable flow-based monitoring
- ACL commands
- clear ip access-list counters
- clear ipv6 access-list counters
- clear mac access-list counters
- deny
- deny (IPv6)
- deny (MAC)
- deny icmp
- deny icmp (IPv6)
- deny ip
- deny ipv6
- deny tcp
- deny tcp (IPv6)
- deny udp
- deny udp (IPv6)
- description
- ip access-group
- ip access-list
- ip as-path deny
- ip as-path permit
- ip community-list standard deny
- ip community–list standard permit
- ip extcommunity-list standard deny
- ip extcommunity-list standard permit
- ip prefix-list description
- ip prefix-list deny
- ip prefix-list permit
- ip prefix-list seq deny
- ip prefix-list seq permit
- ipv6 access-group
- ipv6 access-list
- ipv6 prefix-list deny
- ipv6 prefix-list description
- ipv6 prefix-list permit
- ipv6 prefix-list seq deny
- ipv6 prefix-list seq permit
- mac access-group
- mac access-list
- permit
- permit (IPv6)
- permit (MAC)
- permit icmp
- permit icmp (IPv6)
- permit ip
- permit ipv6
- permit tcp
- permit tcp (IPv6)
- permit udp
- permit udp (IPv6)
- remark
- seq deny
- seq deny (IPv6)
- seq deny (MAC)
- seq deny icmp
- seq deny icmp (IPv6)
- seq deny ip
- seq deny ipv6
- seq deny tcp
- seq deny tcp (IPv6)
- seq deny udp
- seq deny udp (IPv6)
- seq permit
- seq permit (IPv6)
- seq permit (MAC)
- seq permit icmp
- seq permit icmp (IPv6)
- seq permit ip
- seq permit ipv6
- seq permit tcp
- seq permit tcp (IPv6)
- seq permit udp
- seq permit udp (IPv6)
- show access-group
- show access-lists
- show ip as-path-access-list
- show ip community-list
- show ip extcommunity-list
- show ip prefix-list
- Route-map commands
- continue
- match as-path
- match community
- match extcommunity
- match interface
- match ip address
- match ip next-hop
- match ipv6 address
- match ipv6 next-hop
- match metric
- match origin
- match route-type
- match tag
- route-map
- set comm-list delete
- set community
- set extcomm-list delete
- set extcommunity
- set local-preference
- set metric
- set metric-type
- set next-hop
- set origin
- set tag
- set weight
- show route-map
- Quality of service
- Configure quality of service
- Class-map configuration
- Policy-map configuration
- Ingress traffic priorities
- Queue selection
- Strict priority queuing
- Class of service or dot1p classification
- Mark traffic
- Traffic metering
- Bandwidth allocation
- Service-policy rate-shaping
- Policy-based rate-policing
- Control-plane policing
- Congestion avoidance
- Verify configuration
- Egress queue statistics
- QoS commands
- bandwidth
- class
- class-map
- clear interface priority-flow-control
- clear qos statistics
- clear qos statistics type
- control-plane
- flowcontrol
- match
- match cos
- match dscp
- match precedence
- match qos-group
- match vlan
- mtu
- pause
- pfc-cos
- pfc-shared-buffer-size
- police
- policy-map
- priority
- priority-flow-control mode
- qos-group dot1p
- qos-group dscp
- queue-limit
- queue qos-group
- random-detect
- service-policy
- set cos
- set dscp
- set qos-group
- shape
- show class-map
- show control-plane info
- show control-plane statistics
- show interface priority-flow-control
- show qos interface
- show policy-map
- show qos control-plane
- show qos egress bufffers interface
- show egress buffer-stats interface
- show qos ingress buffers interface
- show ingress buffer-stats interface
- show queuing statistics
- show qos system
- show qos system buffers
- show qos maps
- system qos
- trust
- trust dot1p-map
- trust dscp-map
- qos-map traffic-class
- trust-map
- Virtual link trunking
- Converged data center services
- sFlow
- Troubleshoot OS10
- Support resources
When you congure an IP and MAC hashing scheme at the same time, the MAC hashing scheme takes precedence over the IP hashing
scheme.
• Select one or more methods of load balancing and replace the default IP 4-tuple method of balancing trac over a port-channel in
CONFIGURATION mode.
OS10(config)# load-balancing
ingress-port Ingress port configurations
tcp-udp-selection TCP-UDP port for load-balancing configurations
ip-selection IPV4 load-balancing configurations
ipv6-selection IPV6 load-balancing configurations
mac-selection MAC load-balancing configurations
• ingress-port [enable] — Enables the ingress port conguration.
• tcp-upd-selection [l4–destination-port | l4–source-port] — Uses the Layer 4 destination IP address, or
Layer 4 source IP address in the hash calculation.
• ip-selection [destination-ip | source-ip | protocol | vlan-id | l4–destination-port | l4–
source-port] — Uses the destination IP address, source IP address, protocol, VLAN ID, Layer 4 destination IP address, or Layer
4 source IP address in the hash calculation.
• ipv6-selection [destination-ip | source-ip | protocol | vlan-id | l4–destination-port | l4–
source-port] — Uses the destination IPv6 address, source IPv6 address, protocol, VLAN ID, Layer 4 destination IPv6 address,
or Layer 4 source IPv6 address in the hash calculation.
• mac—selection [destination-mac | source-mac | ethertype | vlan-id] — Uses the destination MAC
address, source MAC address, ethertype, or VLAN ID in the hash calculation.
Congure load balancing
OS10(config)# load-balancing ip-selection destination-ip source-ip
Change hash algorithm
The load-balancing command selects the hash criteria applied to load balancing of trac on port-channels. If you do not obtain even
trac distribution, use the
hash-algorithm command to select the hash scheme for LAG. Rotate or shift the L2-bit LAG hash until the
desired trac distribution is achieved.
• Change the default (0) to another algorithm and apply it to LAG hashing in CONFIGURATION mode.
hash-algorithm lag [crc | xor | random]
Change hash algorithm
OS10(config)# hash-algorithm lag xor
Congure interface ranges
Bulk interface conguration allows you apply the same conguration to multiple interfaces - either physical or logical, or to display their
current conguration. You can also create multiple logical interfaces in bulk. An interface range is a set of interfaces to which you can apply
the same command.
You can use interface ranges for:
• Ethernet physical interfaces
• Port channels
• VLAN interfaces
Bulk conguration excludes any non-existing interfaces in an interface range from the conguration. You can congure a default VLAN only
if the interface range being congured consists of only VLAN ports.
The interface range command allows you to create an interface range allowing other commands to be applied to that range of
interfaces.
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Interfaces