Managing Faults on Virtual Services Platform 7200 Series and 8000 Series Version 5
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: New in this document
- Chapter 3: Fault management fundamentals
- Chapter 4: Key Health Indicators using ACLI
- Chapter 5: Key Health Indicators using EDM
- Chapter 6: Link state change control using ACLI
- Chapter 7: Link state change control using EDM
- Chapter 8: RMON configuration using ACLI
- Chapter 9: RMON configuration using EDM
- Enabling RMON globally
- Enabling RMON on a port or VLAN
- Viewing the protocol directory
- Viewing the data source for protocol distribution statistics
- Viewing protocol distribution statistics
- Viewing the host interfaces enabled for monitoring
- Viewing address mappings
- Viewing the data source for host statistics
- Viewing network host statistics
- Viewing application host statistics
- Chapter 10: Log and trap fundamentals
- Chapter 11: Log configuration using ACLI
- Chapter 12: Log configuration using EDM
- Chapter 13: SNMP trap configuration using ACLI
- Chapter 14: SNMP trap configuration using EDM
- Glossary
Switch:1# configure terminal
Add a force message control pattern. If you use a wildcard pattern (****), all messages undergo
message control.
Switch:1(config)# sys force-msg ****
Variable definitions
Use the data in the following table to use the sys force-msg command.
Table 11: Variable definitions
Variable Value
WORD<4-4> Adds a forced message control pattern, where WORD<4-4>
is a string of 4 characters. You can add a four-byte pattern
into the force-msg table. The software and the hardware log
messages that use the first four bytes that match one of the
patterns in the force-msg table undergo the configured
message control action. You can specify up to 32 different
patterns in the force-msg table, including a wildcard pattern
(****) as well. If you specify the wildcard pattern, all messages
undergo message control.
Viewing logs
View log files by file name, category, or severity to identify possible problems.
About this task
View ACLI command and SNMP trap logs, which are logged as normal log messages and logged to
the system log file.
Procedure
1. Enter Privileged EXEC mode:
enable
2. Show log information:
show logging file [alarm] [event-code WORD<0–10>] [module WORD<0–
100>] [name-of-file WORD<1-99>] [save-to-file WORD<1-99>] [severity
WORD<0-25>] [tail] [vrf WORD<0–32>]
Example
Display log file information:
Switch:1>enable
Switch:1#configure terminal
Viewing logs
December 2015 Managing Faults on Avaya VSP 7200 Series and 8000 Series 67
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