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Avaya Bay Command Console User's Manual
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1. Technician Interface Access Login the BCC BCC0001B Figure 1 1 The Technician Interface and the BCC Interface 117383 C Rev 00 1 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC From the bcc gt prompt you can e Execute any system command not classified as Technician Interface only see Appendix B System Commands e Execute configuration commands to perform tasks such as creating or deleting IP interfaces on the router Enter BCC configuration mode by entering the config command at the bec gt prompt Note For a list of services you can configure using the BCC see the Release Notes You can obtain a complete hierarchical listing of all objects configurable on a device by entering the help tree all command at any BCC prompt Platform Requirements The BCC runs on AN ANH ARN ASN System 5000 and BN platforms including ARE FRE and FRE 2 processor modules Each slot must have e 16 MB of dynamic RAM DRAM e 2 MB of free memory space available when you start the BCC If you try to start the BCC with insufficient DRAM or free memory on a slot the BCC returns an error message In that case use Site Manager instead of the BCC Number of BCC Sessions You can open one BCC session per slot in read write configuration mode Other users can open additional BCC sessions in read only nonconfiguration mode on the same slot depending on available memory Each BCC session is m
2. ethernet 2 1 ip 192 168 33 66 255 255 255 0 BCC0009C Figure 2 3 Navigating with the BCC Recursive Search Feature Displaying Configuration Data There are several BCC help commands that let you e Display information on objects in the active actual device configuration e Display information on objects that you can add to the current configuration These are and help tree all Displaying Current Active Configuration Data With the show config and Iso commands you can display e The current device configuration e The operating parameters of each configured object e The values set for the parameters of each configured object The optional arguments you add to these commands depend on what you want to see as follows 2 8 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC Command Task show config Note Combine the following command options to customize show config output lt BCC_instance_ID gt recursive verbose all compact file lt filename gt Show the configuration of the current object only Entered without any command lt option gt show config does not display objects configured on the current object Show the configuration of this object specified by BCC instance identifier Show any dependent objects configured on this current or specified object Examples show config recursive show config compact recursive show config ip
3. lt connector gt numbering starts at 1 on each net module The base module always contains a connector 1 which plugs into a System 5000 backplane for example Ethernet token ring or ATM backplane Example ethernet slot 2 module 2 connector 1 This is an Ethernet interface on connector 1 of the Ethernet net module module 2 in slot 2 atm slot 2 module 3 connector 1 This is an ATM interface on connector 1 of slot 2 a Model 5782 Virtual Network Router VNR base module module 3 Note that the VNR does not accommodate any net modules 117383 C Rev 00 acronyms xvi backplane hardware D 7 BCC accessing 2 1 command files 3 12 commands entering 3 1 show D 1 system B 1 configuration cycle 4 4 defined 1 1 Help 2 26 B 4 platform requirements 1 2 terminology and concepts 1 6 board defined 1 8 bootstrap PROM revision date D 8 box wide objects 1 7 buffers system D 13 C class defined 1 7 commands 2 26 back 2 3 config 1 2 configuration 3 5 continuing 3 4 editing 3 3 entering 3 1 Help 2 26 pwe 2 3 show console D 4 117383 C Rev 00 Index show hardware D 7 show process D 10 show system D 13 source 3 14 system B 1 connector defined 1 9 console subcommands D 4 context changing 2 3 defined 1 5 displaying 2 3 continuing a command line 3 4 conventions text xiv creating a new configuration 4 1 D delete command 3 11 4 17 derived
4. Bay Networks grants the end user of the Software Licensee a personal nonexclusive nontransferable license a to use the Software either on a single computer or if applicable on a single authorized device identified by host ID for which it was originally acquired b to copy the Software solely for backup purposes in support of authorized use of the Software and c to use and copy the associated user manual solely in support of authorized use of the Software by Licensee This license applies to the Software only and does not extend to Bay Networks Agent software or other Bay Networks software products Bay Networks Agent software or other Bay Networks software products are licensed for use under the terms of the applicable Bay Networks Inc Software License Agreement that accompanies such software and upon payment by the end user of the applicable license fees for such software 2 Restrictions on use reservation of rights The Software and user manuals are protected under copyright laws Bay Networks and or its licensors retain all title and ownership in both the Software and user manuals including any revisions made by Bay Networks or its licensors The copyright notice must be reproduced and included with any copy of any portion of the Software or user manuals Licensee may not modify translate decompile disassemble use for any competitive analysis reverse engineer distribute or create derivative works from the Software or use
5. For some objects the BCC automatically appends an internally generated number to ensure the uniqueness of the BCC instance ID For example the BCC creates an instance ID for ARP on IP based on the object name arp plus the address of the underlying IP interface 1 2 3 4 plus an internally generated integer resulting in an ID such as arp 1 2 3 4 1 In other rare cases a configurable object may also have required parameters that do not become part of its BCC instance ID For example the global OSPF object has a required router id parameter that does not become part of the instance ID Many such required parameters end in id such as global id and router id Each object has its own requirements for unique instance identification within the total device configuration Global Box Wide Objects Global or box wide objects provide services uniformly to all slots of a network device Examples include global IP BGP TCP SNMP FTP TFTP and Telnet Some protocols such as IP RIP and OSPF have global and interface level objects 117383 C Rev 00 1 7 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Physical Device Objects The following sections provide BCC terms for the physical device Box and Stack The BCC uses the term box or stack to identify the root level of the BCC configuration tree for a Bay Networks device Every box or stack object has a type parameter The value assigned to the type parameter identifies the type of
6. Using the Bay Command Console BCC BayRS Version 13 10 Site Manager Software Version 7 10 BCC Version 4 10 Part No 117383 C Rev 00 November 1998 Bay Networks Where Information Flows Bay Networks Where Information Flows 4401 Great America Parkway 8 Federal Street Santa Clara CA 95054 Billerica MA 01821 Copyright 1998 Bay Networks Inc All rights reserved Printed in the USA November 1998 The information in this document is subject to change without notice The statements configurations technical data and recommendations in this document are believed to be accurate and reliable but are presented without express or implied warranty Users must take full responsibility for their applications of any products specified in this document The information in this document is proprietary to Bay Networks Inc The software described in this document is furnished under a license agreement and may only be used in accordance with the terms of that license A summary of the Software License is included in this document Trademarks ACE AN BCN BLN BN FRE Optivity PPX Quick2Config and Bay Networks are registered trademarks and Advanced Remote Node ANH ARN ASN BayRS BaySecure BayStack BCC SPEX System 5000 and the Bay Networks logo are trademarks of Bay Networks Inc Microsoft MS MS DOS Win32 Windows and Windows NT are registered trade
7. r v 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC Example Display parameters of an object configured at the next subcontext level relative to your current location in the device configuration tree box eth 2 1 first navigate to the object ethernet 2 1 show config r v ethernet slot 2 connector 1 circuit name E21 alpha state enabled bofl enable bofl timeout 5 hardware filter disable transmit queue length 0 receive queue length 0 bofl retries 5 bofl tmo divisor 1 ip address 192 168 125 34 mask 255 255 255 224 state enabled assocaddr 0 0 0 0 cost 1 broadcast 192 168 125 32 back rip state enabled supply enabled listen enabled back back back 117383 C Rev 00 2 19 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Example Display parameters associated with all objects configured on ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 box show config ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 r v ip address 192 168 125 34 mask 255 255 255 224 state enabled assocaddr 0 0 0 0 cost 1 arp state enabled back rip state enabled supply enabled back back Displaying Configuration Choices From your current location in BCC configuration mode you can display the following information on objects parameters and parameter values available for you to configure on a Bay Networks device Command Task Display objects subcontexts available for you to configure on the current object Display the
8. Y continued 117383 C Rev 00 B 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Table B 1 System Commands continued Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User help lt commana gt all The help command entered without A V arguments at the Technician Interface Technician Interface only prompt displays an alphabetical list of all commands with syntax only The list excludes commands available only in BCC mode The combination help lt command gt displays detailed Help on a specific command excluding any commands available only in BCC mode The combination help all displays detailed Help on all system commands excluding those available only in BCC mode history lt n gt Display the command history list or for A VY the Technician Interface only recall lt n gt option Technician Interface only command number lt n gt from the history list info List values currently assigned to all VY VY configurable parameters of this object BCC configuration mode only ip lt subcommand gt lt flags gt Display data from IP show a different A A view for each subcommand or flag you Technician Interface only enter ip6 lt subcommand gt lt flags gt Display data from IPv6 show a different A view for each subcommand or flag you Technician Interface only enter list lt instances gt lt obj_name gt List objects in the MIB Y U Technician Interface onl
9. and compact all unused space into a single contiguous block of free space for new files on the same volume Y config read write read only BCC only Enter BCC configuration mode If you logged on as Manager you have read write access to the device configuration if you logged on as User you have read only access which allows you to display the existing configuration but prevents you from changing the configuration If you enter BCC configuration mode as Manager and want to change your privilege level for the current session from read write to read only enter config read only To change Manager privileges back to read write enter config read write copy lt vol gt lt filename1 gt lt vol gt lt filename2 gt Technician Interface only Copy the contents of the first file to the second file cp lt vol gt lt filename1 gt lt vol gt lt filename2 gt BCC only Copy the contents of the first file to the second file cwc Change working context config mode only Issued with the argument cwc changes from the current configuration context to root level Issued without any argument cwe changes from the current working context to the previous parent configuration context date lt mm dd yy gt lt hh mm ss gt lt hh mm gt Display or update the system time and time zone Y continued 117383 C Rev 00 Using the Bay Comm
10. cas BE E O Gz Ez I Serial J wihNTt E 5 BayStack Advanced Remote Node Base module ARNOO006A Example ethernet slot 1 connector 2 This interface is configured on LAN connector 2 which exists physically on an Ethernet expansion module Ethernet connector 1 is on the base module Example serial slot 1 connector 3 This is a serial WAN interface configured on WAN connector 3 which exists physically on the ARN expansion module 117383 C Rev 00 Syntax for Module Location Table E 1 Syntax for Specifying Module Location per Device continued Platform Syntax BN lt interface gt lt slot gt lt connector gt System 5000 lt interface gt interface type ethernet token ring serial etc e lt slot gt 2 through 5 BLN or 1 through 14 BCN lt connector gt numbering starts with connector 1 on each slot per media type Example ethernet slot 8 connector 3 This is an Ethernet interface configured on connector 3 of slot 8 of a BCN router lt interface gt lt slot gt lt module gt lt connector gt e lt interface gt interface type ethernet token ring serial atm etc e lt slot_number gt 2 through 13 in a System 5000 chassis lt module gt numbering corresponds to net module 1 or 2 which plugs into a System 5000 base module A System 5000 base module is always module 3
11. ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 2 4 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC Example go back two levels rip 192 168 155 151 ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 1 In the second example the BCC searches back toward root until it finds a context or level where the object you specified in this case ethernet 2 1 exists in the router configuration tree The BCC enters the context of this object and the prompt displays your new location Moving Back to Root Level You can move back to root level in configuration mode by entering the name of the object at that level For an AN ANH ARN or BN router enter ip 1 2 3 4 box box For an ASN or System 5000 router enter ip 1 2 3 4 stack stack Moving Forward One or More Levels To move from your current working level to the next configured level Figure 2 1 enter the BCC instance ID of the desired object as follows Example box ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 1 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip rip 1 2 3 4 Notice that a slash character joins the name and any required parameter values to make a BCC instance ID for any configured object 117383 C Rev 00 2 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC box box eth 2 1 Starting context l ethernet 2 1 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 o S ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip rip 1 2 3 4 Ending context rip 1 2 3 4 BCCO0014B Figure 2 1 Moving Away from
12. 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 disable You can alternatively assign the value disabled to the state parameter ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 state disabled enable delete Change the state of a configured object to enabled ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 enable You can alternatively assign the value enabled to the state parameter ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 state enabled Delete the object identified in the BCC context sensitive prompt Example ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 delete CAUTION Deleting an object at one level of the configuration tree deletes all of its dependent objects branches stemming from that location To disable reenable or delete an object in the immediate subcontext relative to your current location in the device configuration enter one of the following commands disable lt BCC_instance_id gt enable lt BCC_instance_id gt delete lt BCC_instance_id gt Examples ethernet 2 1 disable ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 ethernet 2 1 enable ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 delete rip 1 2 3 4 117383 C Rev 00 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Creating and Using BCC Files You can save BCC configuration commands to an ASCII file edit the file add comments and then use the source command in configuration mode to read the file merge the new configuration data into the device s active configuration You can also save TCL scripting commands to a file use the source command to read the
13. 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 recursive Show the configuration including the current value of every parameter of the object s shown Examples show config verbose show config recursive verbose show config ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 recursive verbose Show the total device configuration Examples show config all show config all verbose Show the configuration without navigation back commands Example show config compact Note In configuration mode do not import using source the contents of a file saved using the compact option Save the output of this command to a file Examples show config file boston config show config recursive verbose file boston config Regardless of the command options you enter output of the show config command typically includes e Objects added by a user into the active device configuration e Objects added automatically by the BCC to support a user configured object 117383 C Rev 00 2 9 Using the Bay Command Console BCC The arguments you add to the Iso command also depend on what you want to see as follows Command Iso Task List only next level objects configured on the current object Display output in tabular format Example Iso Iso list List only next level objects configured on the current object Display output in nontabular format Example Iso l Iso recursive List by BCC instance identifier object
14. 114 255 255 255 224 Iso arp 192 168 133 114 1 rip 192 168 133 114 3 Delete the object ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 delete ethernet 13 1 4 Verify that you deleted the object ethernet 13 1 Iso no objects listed Note that ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 no longer appears in the list of objects configured on ethernet 13 1 With a single delete command the BCC automatically deleted the branch objects arp 192 168 133 114 1 and rip 192 168 133 114 configured on ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 117383 C Rev 00 Using the Bay Command Console BCC You can also delete an object by entering the following command from its parent context delete lt BCC_instance_identifier gt Example ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 delete rip 1 2 3 4 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 Using this method you remain in the current context after deleting the branch object 4 18 117383 C Rev 00 Appendix A Multi User Access The Technician Interface provides by default two user login levels Manager and User The Manager login allows you to enter any system command and allows read write access to the device configuration The User login allows you to enter only user level system commands and allows read only access to the device configuration The multiuser access feature allows you to e Define multiple user groups names passwords and privileges for access to the Technician Interface e Manage the distribution of user na
15. 255 255 255 224 broadcast 192 168 125 32 To display the configuration of all other objects configured on the same branch add the recursive or r option to the show config BCC_instance_ID command Example box show config ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 r ip address 192 168 125 34 mask 255 255 255 224 broadcast 192 168 125 32 arp back rip back back 117383 C Rev 00 2 11 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Displaying Objects at the Next Subcontext Level To display by BCC instance identifier any objects configured at the next subcontext level accessible from your current location in configuration mode use the Iso or Iso list Iso 1 commands Example Display in tabular format a list of objects configured on the current object Show the BCC instance identifier of each configured object box Iso board 1 board 4 dns ip telnet board 2 board 5 ethernet 2 1 snmp tftp board 3 console 1 ftp syslog Example Display in nontabular format a list of objects configured on the current object Show the BCC instance identifier of each configured object box Iso l board 1 board 2 board 3 board 4 board 5 ftp snmp tftp console 1 telnet ethernet 2 1 ip dns syslog Displaying Objects at All Subcontext Levels To display in hierarchical format the active configuration of the current object and any other dependent objects configured on the same branch use the show config recursive command Example box eth 2
16. 5 hardware filter disable transmit queue length 0 receive queue length 0 bofl retries 5 bofl tmo divisor 1 Example using the show config verbose command ethernet 2 1 show config v ethernet slot 2 connector 1 circuit name E21 alpha state enabled bofl enable bofl timeout 5 hardware filter disable transmit queue length 0 receive queue length 0 bofl retries 5 bofl tmo divisor 1 117383 C Rev 00 2 17 Using the Bay Command Console BCC From any configuration context use the following command to display all parameter values associated with an object anywhere in the active device configuration show config lt BCC_instance_ID gt verbose Example box show config ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 v ip address 192 168 125 34 mask 255 255 255 224 state enabled assocaddr 0 0 0 0 cost 1 broadcast 192 168 125 32 configured mac address 0x mtu discovery disabled mask reply disabled all subnet broadcast disabled address resolution arp proxy disabled host cache aging cache off udp checksum enabled end station support disabled redirects enabled cache size 128 Displaying Parameter Values for All Objects on a Branch To display the parameter values assigned to all objects accessible from your current context or from a context you specify by BCC instance identifier use the following command show config lt BCC_instance_ID gt recursive verbose or show config lt BCC_instance_ID gt
17. Bay Networks device chassis type Value Router Model an AN ANH arn ARN asn ASN freln BLN frecn BCN sys5000 System 5000 Board The BCC uses the term board to identify any logic or circuit board in a Bay Networks device Each board typically occupies a slot in a network device On some Bay Networks products one board may contain another board such as an RMON data collection module DCM All board objects have a type parameter that identifies its hardware type For example qenf is the value of the type parameter for a Quad Ethernet with Hardware Filters board Note For board descriptions based on the literal value of the type parameter for any board object see the Release Notes 117383 C Rev 00 Overview of the BCC Module The BCC uses the term module to identify network media specific I O modules for Ethernet Token Ring etc Each module has one or more connectors for attachment to a physical network transmission medium Slot The BCC uses the term slot to identify the location as well as a physical and electrical means for attaching boards to logic and power connections available on the device chassis Note the following e Multislot devices such as the BLN or BCN router accommodate a system module SRM L in one slot and one link module in each remaining slot e Single slot devices such as the AN ANH ASN and ARN routers accommodate one base module slot 1 which may be augmented by one or
18. Commercial Computer Software Restricted Rights clause of FAR 52 227 19 and the limitations set out in this license for civilian agencies and subparagraph c 1 ii of the Rights in Technical Data and Computer Software clause of DFARS 252 227 7013 for agencies of the Department of Defense or their successors whichever is applicable 6 Use of Software in the European Community This provision applies to all Software acquired for use within the European Community If Licensee uses the Software within a country in the European Community the Software Directive enacted by the Council of European Communities Directive dated 14 May 1991 will apply to the examination of the Software to facilitate interoperability Licensee agrees to notify Bay Networks of any such intended examination of the Software and may procure support and assistance from Bay Networks 7 Term and termination This license is effective until terminated however all of the restrictions with respect to Bay Networks copyright in the Software and user manuals will cease being effective at the date of expiration of the Bay Networks copyright those restrictions relating to use and disclosure of Bay Networks confidential information shall continue in effect Licensee may terminate this license at any time The license will automatically terminate if Licensee fails to comply with any of the terms and conditions of the license Upon termination for any reason Licensee will immediately
19. assigned to the new current object Enter for a list of objects and parameters configurable in this context of the configuration tree Enter nae of the next object you want to configure for example ethernet Usage Help returned Reenter the command in the format shown in the usage Help message BCC0013B Figure 4 2 Typical BCC Configuration Cycle 117383 C Rev 00 Tutorial Configuring a Bay Networks Router To create the sample configuration shown in Figure 4 1 using BCC commands proceed as follows 1 Log on to the router as Manager so that you can modify the device configuration Bay Networks Inc and its Licensors Copyright 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 All rights reserved Login Manager Mounting new volume Device label Directory 2 New Present Working Directory 2 Welcome to the Backbone Technician Interface Routerl gt 2 Start the BCC by entering bcc at the Technician Interface prompt Router1l gt bec Welcome to Bay Command Console To enter configuration mode type config To list all system commands type To exit the BCC type exit bec gt 3 Enter BCC configuration mode by entering config bec gt config box 117383 C Rev 00 4 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC 4 Check the hardware configuration of the router box show config all box type frecn BCN router with a FRE 2 controller board slot 5 type sync Serial link module i
20. command line For example the following command changes the BOFL timeout interval to 4 seconds on ethernet 1 1 box ethernet 1 1 bofl timeout 4 bofl timeout 4 is the parameter value pair Required Derived and Other Parameters The BCC indicates when parameter values are required you must supply a value or derived the BCC supplies a value For all other parameters the BCC supplies a default value that you can change Specifying Multiple Parameter Value Pairs You can specify parameter values as follows e Enter an object name and one parameter value pair per command line e Enter an object name and multiple parameter value pairs each pair separated by a space on the same command line Example In the following example you specify one parameter value pair on each command line box ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 1 bofl retries 6 ethernet 2 1 bofl timeout 7 ethernet 2 1 hardware filter enabled ethernet 2 1 117383 C Rev 00 3 9 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Example In the following example you specify multiple parameter value pairs on each command line ethernet 2 1 ip address 1 2 3 4 mask 255 255 255 0 redirects off ip 1 2 3 4 255 255 255 0 ospf area 2 3 4 54 hello interval 5 ospf 1 2 3 4 Specifying Multiple Values for One Parameter Some BCC configuration parameters accept multiple values simultaneously For example the Syslog service has a severity mask parameter that accepts any of t
21. destroy or return to Bay Networks the Software user manuals and all copies Bay Networks is not liable to Licensee for damages in any form solely by reason of the termination of this license 8 Export and Re export Licensee agrees not to export directly or indirectly the Software or related technical data or information without first obtaining any required export licenses or other governmental approvals Without limiting the foregoing Licensee on behalf of itself and its subsidiaries and affiliates agrees that it will not without first obtaining all export licenses and approvals required by the U S Government i export re export transfer or divert any such Software or technical data or any direct product thereof to any country to which such exports or re exports are restricted or embargoed under United States export control laws and regulations or to any national or resident of such restricted or embargoed countries or ii provide the Software or related technical data or information to any military end user or for any military end use including the design development or production of any chemical nuclear or biological weapons 9 General If any provision of this Agreement is held to be invalid or unenforceable by a court of competent jurisdiction the remainder of the provisions of this Agreement shall remain in full force and effect This Agreement will be governed by the laws of the state of California Should you have any qu
22. device You can later use the BCC source command to import merge configuration data from a file into the active device configuration You cannot import commands saved to a file from output of any show config command containing the compact option The compact option eliminates back commands necessary for navigation in BCC configuration mode Examples show config file show config all file show config verbose file show config recursive file show config compact file show config all verbose file show config all verbose compact file Adding Comments to a Command File You can use a text editor such as vi on a UNIX workstation to add descriptive comments to a BCC command file Enter comments in the following format lt command gt 3 lt comment gt or lt comment gt lt command gt Example box board slot 1 type andse 192 168 47 129 192 168 47 21 117383 C Rev 00 3 13 Using the Bay Command Console BCC When you finish editing the file save it on your workstation or PC The comments are for reference only Comments do not appear in the output of any show config command Importing Configuration Commands from a File When you are logged in to the BCC as Manager you can use the source command in configuration mode to read BCC configuration and navigation commands from a designated ASCII source file into the active device configuration Caution The source command makes immediate ch
23. enabled disabled True name of this user Group ID numbers of this user Audit level for this user 117383 C Rev 00 Using the Bay Command Console BCC show console The show console lt option gt commands display console port configuration and statistics information The show console command supports the following options config stats config Displays configuration and Technician Interface environment information for the serial ports configured on your system or for a specific port The table includes the following information Port Number Port number for the information displayed Valid ports are 1 2 3 and 4 Not all systems have four physical ports A configured port that does not exist is in the Absent state State Port s current state as follows e Absent Not physically present Disabled Unavailable Down Unavailable e Init Initializing e Up Available Port Name Name that the system assigns to the port You cannot specify a name You can use the name to correlate a port number to a physical port The name of the port should be printed next to the physical port connection for example Port 1 CONSOLE The names do not specify the port s use All ports are serial ports used for Technician Interface sessions only For example port MODEM1 may be a modem connection or a dummy terminal connection depending on its configuration Although port 4 is called PRINTER it is exactl
24. id Login name of this user none lt string gt true name True name of this user none lt string gt encrypted password Encrypted password of this user none lt string gt group ids Group ID numbers with which this user name 1 all groups 1 31 is associated audit level Privilege level activity to include in the audit all all log For example to set the login ID for a user enter box access access Users users user login id david users david Configuring Group Configuring the group object lets you set the profile for a group of users To configure group navigate to the groups prompt for example stack access groups and enter values or accept the default values for the following parameters Table 4 3 A 4 117383 C Rev 00 Multi User Access Table 4 3 Group Parameter Options Parameter Description Default Options state Administrative state of this object enabled enabled disabled name Name of this group none lt string gt group id ID number of this group none 1 31 privilege level Privilege level of this group user all manager user audit level Privilege level activity to include in the audit all all log For example to set the group name and group ID enter stack access access Qroups groups group name admin group id 1 groups admin Configuring Audit By default each command issued by a user is recorded in the audit log The log en
25. ip routes but not both If the command sets a parameter value consisting of multiple elements you must type the braces as part of the command if instructed to do so Example severity mask fault warning info brackets Indicate optional elements in syntax descriptions Do not type the brackets when entering the command Example If the command syntax is show ip interfaces alerts you can enter either show ip interfaces or show ip interfaces alerts xiv 117383 C Rev 00 Preface ellipsis points Indicate that you repeat the last element of the command as needed Example If the command syntax is ethernet 2 1 lt parameter gt lt value gt you enter ethernet 2 1 and as many parameter value pairs as needed italic text Indicates file and directory names new terms book titles and variables in command syntax descriptions Where a variable is two or more words the words are connected by an underscore Example If the command syntax is show at lt valid_route gt valid_route is one variable and you substitute one value for it screen text Indicates system output for example prompts and system messages Example Set Bay Networks Trap Monitor Filters separator gt Shows menu paths Example Protocols gt IP identifies the IP option on the Protocols menu vertical line Separates choices for command keywords and arguments Enter only one of the choices Do not type th
26. provided will be free from defects in materials and workmanship under normal use for a period of 90 days from the date Software is first shipped to Licensee Bay Networks will replace defective media at no charge if it is returned to Bay Networks during the warranty period along with proof of the date of shipment This warranty does not apply if the media has been damaged as a result of accident misuse or abuse The Licensee assumes all responsibility for selection of the Software to achieve Licensee s intended results and for the installation use and results obtained from the Software Bay Networks does not warrant a that the functions contained in the software will meet the Licensee s requirements b that the Software will operate in the hardware or software combinations that the Licensee may select c that the operation of the Software will be uninterrupted or error free or d that all defects in the operation of the Software will be corrected Bay Networks is not obligated to remedy any Software defect that cannot be reproduced with the latest Software release These warranties do not apply to the Software if it has been i altered except by Bay Networks or in accordance with its instructions ii used in conjunction with another vendor s product resulting in the defect or iii damaged by improper environment abuse misuse accident or negligence THE FOREGOING WARRANTIES AND LIMITATIONS ARE EXCLUSIVE REMEDIES AND ARE IN LIEU OF ALL OTH
27. specific number of levels back toward root level The syntax for the back command is as follows back lt r gt Entering the back command with no argument moves you back one level closer to root level 117383 C Rev 00 2 3 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Example rip 192 168 125 34 back ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 back ethernet 2 1 Entering the back command with an integer moves you from your current working location back toward root the number of levels you specify Example rip 192 168 125 34 back 2 ethernet 2 1 In this example the back 2 command moves you from the current working location rip 192 168 125 34 back two levels to ethernet 2 1 with ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 as the intervening level Note If you enter an integer value that exceeds the actual number of levels back to root box or stack level the BCC returns to root level Navigating with Configuration Commands Using BCC configuration commands you can e Move back to a previous level e Move back to root level e Move forward to the next level e Move from your current level to any other level in the device configuration tree Moving Back One or More Levels To move from your current working level back one or more levels closer to root level of the device configuration tree you can enter the full BCC instance ID of the desired object as follows Example go back one level rip 192 168 125 34
28. the Login prompt that appears on your Telnet or console display The Manager login allows you to enter any system command and allows read write access to the device configuration The User login allows you to enter only user level system command and allows read only access to the device configuration 117383 C Rev 00 2 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Enter bcc at the Technician Interface prompt Routerl gt bec Welcome to Bay Command Console To enter configuration mode type config To list all system commands type To exit the BCC type exit bec gt Start BCC configuration mode by entering config at the bcc gt prompt bec gt config box You enter configuration mode at the root box level of the BCC configuration tree The prompt ends with a pound symbol if you have read write privileges Manager only or with a greater than symbol gt if you have read only privileges Manager or User If you enter BCC configuration mode as Manager and want to change your privilege level for the current session from read write to read only enter config read only To change Manager privileges back to read write enter config read write You cannot change your privilege level from read only to read write if you logged in as User Caution When you enter BCC configuration commands with read write privileges you immediately modify the device configuration When you finish using BCC configuration mod
29. the current parameter settings Technician Interface AN routers only used to determine the source of image and configuration files help Display an overview of BCC A A Help oriented features continued B 4 117383 C Rev 00 System Commands Table B 1 System Commands continued Command Purpose Login Access Privileges Manager User help lt command gt help commands Display detailed Help on a specific command Display an alphabetical list of all commands with syntax and terse descriptions Y Y Y Y help commands more Display syntax and more detailed command descriptions for all BCC commands in alphabetical order help lt object_name gt Display definitions for parameters of the currrent object For example help ip ospf defines parameters of the global ospf object and help ethernet defines parameters of an Ethernet port object help lt parameter_name gt help syntax Display definitions of all parameters of the current object For example help bofl displays the definitions of all parameters of ethernet Display Help on how to interpret BCC syntax symbols help lt task gt Display Help on how to perform a specific task The help commands are help learning bce and help editing help tree all Display a hierarchical list of all objects you can configure on this platform use all or on the current object omit all
30. 1 ethernet 2 1 ip address 1 2 3 4 mask 255 0 0 0 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 BCCO0017B Figure 1 4 Location or Context in Configuration Mode Objects and Instances In BCC terminology configurable entities are referred to as objects of a particular class each of which constitutes an instance e An object is a configurable physical or logical entity such as a physical interface or a protocol on an interface Every configurable object belongs to a specific class that defines its characteristics 1 6 117383 C Rev 00 Overview of the BCC e Aclass is a template for a configurable object such as Ethernet or the protocol IP When you add a new object to the configuration of a device the BCC creates a copy an instance of the appropriate template e An instance is an object uniquely identifiable within the total device configuration Each instance is identified by its BCC instance identifier BCC Instance Identifier A BCC instance identifier uniquely identifies a single instance of an object configured on a device The BCC instance ID consists typically of the name of the object combined with the values you specify for its required parameters For example the BCC instance ID for an Ethernet interface on a BN platform consists of ethernet s ot connector as in ethernet 2 1 the BCC instance ID for an Ethernet interface on an ASN platform consists of ethernet s ot module connector as in ethernet 1 2 2
31. 1 ethernet 2 1 Show config r ethernet slot 2 connector 1 circuit name E21 alpha ip address 192 168 125 34 mask 255 255 255 224 broadcast 192 168 125 32 arp back rip back back back Output of the show config r command includes any back commands necessary for navigation back from the current context to the prior context 2 12 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC Note If you enter show config r at root level in configuration mode the BCC displays the same output as show config all Displaying the Total Device Configuration To display the hierarchical listing of every object actively configured on this device use the show config all command Example box show config all box type frecn build version BayRS BCC board slot 5 type sync back board slot 7 type srml back board slot 9 type dtok console portnum 1 prompt Sslot auto manager script automgr bat auto user script autouser bat back ethernet slot 13 connector 1 circuit name E131 ip address 192 168 133 114 mask 255 255 255 224 arp back rip back back back 117383 C Rev 00 2 13 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Note The BCC displays the same output as show config all when you enter show config recursive at root level in configuration mode Displaying the Path to Every Configured Object To display by BCC instance identifier the path to every object configured at the next subcontext level enter
32. 6 Delete Conigured OEGE sessccnensssentssatsaarudeadaareuu panera nina aan 4 17 Appendix A Multi User Access Mukuser ACESS LOGIN ccs coccenstisccassine duce sshvesocodsbantsacedesrvanuteanepsieatanevenessaiyteaesaedacdiemalys A 2 COMMUNE Multiuser ACCESE sarcinii anian aa i aai AS A 2 Configuring Access 06 PEAT P EAE E R ndi TET n A 3 Cono UST oiia A A 4 COnnonring rO seii aE E EEk A 4 Conngummg AUIE cianat a E a a cada ateeieee A 5 117383 C Rev 00 vii Appendix B System Commands Appendix C TCL Support Appendix D System show Commands Shon BICOOSS 4 ietcrelica cohen stews iver siti aa show BONBON acina SHON DANAE sorea oeaio aai Show IMAGO oiana aE aa show process n se ee mers in TE ET ahon Sye ania eine iea nepal Appendix E Syntax for Module Location Index viii 117383 C Rev 00 Figures Figure 1 1 The Technician Interface and the BCC Interface ceeceeecteteeeeeeeees 1 1 Figure 1 2 Sample BCC Configuration n sssrinin unine neien 1 4 Figure 1 3 Configuring IP and RIP on an Ethernet Interface ou ccceseesseeeereeees 1 5 Figure 1 4 Location or Context in Configuration Mode 00 0 0 ee eeesesseeeeeeeeneeeneeeeeeees 1 6 Figure 2 1 Moving Away from Root Level n se niona E 2 6 Figure 2 2 Navigating to an Object in the Configuration ss seseerrseesesrereenee 2 7 Figure 2 3 Navigating with the BCC Recursive Search Feature cceee 2 8 Figure 2 4 Objects You Can
33. 6 Ung Deney aK mere ereener rer rere nrc reer ere tree tyre rer rr rer ere cerry rr reer eet rrr erty 3 7 Using Abbreviated Syntax PE P E ere re cee ionas meee eee gues BSc iy Parameter VANS iniinda nine na n e aiaia A i AEn 3 9 Required Derived and Other Parameters c cccccccessseceecseceeeeesseeaeeessesaeeees 3 9 Specifying Multiple Parameter Value Pairs T PA P aran aaa a Specifying Multiple Values for One Parameter c cccecseeeesceeeeeeeeeeseeeeees 3 10 Specifying Name or String Values ii ciccicecccierteeccedeeteeoncantaeien deena nadani anain 3 10 Disabling Reenabling and Deleting a Configured Object sssssssessseessseeeseeeeee 3 11 heating and Using BOG FIIES siusis tianmi tnaa ieeni mene ENR Saving Commands and Displays to a File on a Workstation oan 3 12 Saving Configuration Commands to a File on a Bay Networks Device 3 13 Adding Comments to a Command File cceccceeeeeeeceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeneeeenaees 3 13 Importing Configuration Commands from a File 0 ree ens 3 14 Saving the Active Configuration as a Bootable File ssssssssssnnnnssnnnseernnnneenn nn 3 14 Chapter 4 Tutorial Configuring a Bay Networks Router Creating and Modifying a Device Configuration cccecccceeeeeceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaeeeseneees 4 1 BISA Ring a contigue MICE rassinn aa 4 15 Enabling a Configured Object Sere covet E T E T peas 4 1
34. Configure at the Next Subcontext Level a se 2 22 Figure 4 1 Sample BCC Configuration BCN Router sseseeseeeessessseeesrerererrrnne 4 3 Figure 4 2 Typical BCC Configuration Cycle ssiri naina iiaa 4 4 Figure 4 3 Configurable Multiuser Access Objects eseessseeeeeseessreesrsesreessrreses A 2 117383 C Rev 00 ix Tables Table 2 1 Help for BCG System Comings sacciiveccstetrscesidiveetas ateeendenrsensieneel 2 26 Table 3 1 Keystrokes for Editing BCC Command Lines ccceseeeeeteeeeteeeeees 3 3 Table 3 2 BCC Commands for Disabling Reenabling and Deleting 0 3 11 Table 4 1 Access Parameter OpIOnS sscn iseanisnsceiennt gna adenine A 3 Table 4 2 User Parameter Options inben aooaa Hrann AA E T eeehiets eee A 4 Table 4 3 Got Parameter ODIOM sic secteeiecade cere aerisire S A 5 Table 4 4 Audit Parameter Options ccccccccssececsececsseeeeeeecsseeeeesseecsseeesssaeeseseees A 5 Table B 1 System Commands srsincscicsnnaveccccanarececsananonces PE E E B 2 Table E 1 Syntax for Specifying Module Location per Device cceeeeeeeteeeeeeees E 1 117383 C Rev 00 xi Preface The BCC is a command line interface for configuring Bay Networks devices If you are responsible for configuring and managing Bay Networks AN ANH ARN ASN BN BCN and BLN or System 5000 routers read this guide to learn how to use the Bay Command Console BCC Before Yo
35. D 4 hardware D 7 process D 10 system D 13 tcp D 2 117383 C Rev 00 slot defined 1 9 slots hardware D 8 source command 3 14 specifying a path 2 6 2 7 statistics console D 6 support Bay Networks xvii syntax configuration commands 3 6 E 1 system information D 14 T TCL support C 1 technical publications xvii technical support xvii Technician Interface 2 1 text conventions xiv U User privileges 2 2 117383 C Rev 00 Index 3
36. ER WARRANTIES EXPRESS OR IMPLIED INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION ANY WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE Licensee is responsible for the security of 117383 C Rev 00 iii its own data and information and for maintaining adequate procedures apart from the Software to reconstruct lost or altered files data or programs 4 Limitation of liability INNO EVENT WILL BAY NETWORKS OR ITS LICENSORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY COST OF SUBSTITUTE PROCUREMENT SPECIAL INDIRECT INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES RESULTING FROM INACCURATE OR LOST DATA OR LOSS OF USE OR PROFITS ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE PERFORMANCE OF THE SOFTWARE EVEN IF BAY NETWORKS HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES IN NO EVENT SHALL THE LIABILITY OF BAY NETWORKS RELATING TO THE SOFTWARE OR THIS AGREEMENT EXCEED THE PRICE PAID TO BAY NETWORKS FOR THE SOFTWARE LICENSE 5 Government Licensees This provision applies to all Software and documentation acquired directly or indirectly by or on behalf of the United States Government The Software and documentation are commercial products licensed on the open market at market prices and were developed entirely at private expense and without the use of any U S Government funds The license to the U S Government is granted only with restricted rights and use duplication or disclosure by the U S Government is subject to the restrictions set forth in subparagraph c 1 of the
37. Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC keyword is a subcommand that further specifies what aspect of object_name you want to see such as show ip routes Many show commands have multiple keyword levels such as show frame relay stats lapf errors filter is a command option that limits show command output to a specific subset or filtered view of the total information available You must enter the dash character and the filter explicitly with no space between the two for example show frame relay stats lapf errors interface You can often combine filters in a single command such as show atm interfaces disabled slot 9 filter_argument pertains to the filter preceding it in the command line The filter_argument further restricts the filtered output from a show command such as show frame relay stats lapf errors interface lt interface_address gt To display any available show command object_name keyword filter or filter_argument use the command as follows e To display a list of every object_name available for the BCC show command enter show Example bec gt show access dsucsu hifn mctlel sonet atm dsx3 hssi modem syslog bgp dvmrp http mtm system bri ethernet hwcomp ntp tcp classical ip fddi igmp ospf telnet config frame relay ip ppp tftp console ftlel ipx process token ring dial Ep isdn switch serial wep dns hardware lane snmp e To display every keyword available for a specific object_name enter show lt o
38. Root Level Moving to Any Context in the Device Configuration To navigate to any configured object you can specify a full or absolute path from root box or stack level at any prompt When you enter a path specify the BCC instance identifier of each object Example To move from ip 192 168 33 66 255 255 255 0 on ethernet 2 1 to rip 1 2 3 4 on ethernet 2 2 Figure 2 2 enter the following command ip 192 168 33 66 255 255 255 0 box ethernet 2 2 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip rip 1 2 3 4 2 6 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC ethernet 2 2 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip Ending context 4 o O x lt t Y M BCC0009B Figure 2 2 Navigating to an Object in the Configuration The BCC can automatically search backward recursively toward root level until it finds a level where the object you specify first in the command line exists in the device configuration tree Example To move from ip 192 168 33 66 255 255 255 0 on ethernet 2 1 to rip 1 2 3 4 on ethernet 2 2 enter the following command ip 192 168 33 66 255 255 255 0 ethernet 2 2 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip rip 1 2 3 4 In this example the BCC searches backward to find ethernet 2 2 specified first in the command line and then moves sequentially to the other locations ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 and rip specified next in the command line 117383 C Rev 00 2 7 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Starting context
39. and Console BCC Table B 1 System Commands continued Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User delete lt filename gt lt volume gt Delete the file from the specified volume f Technician Interface only see rm for BCC equivalent delete lt BCC_instance_ID gt Delete the object described in the current f prompt or delete the object known by the BCC configuration read write mode only specified lt D gt and configured previously from the current level diags lt s ot_ D gt Perform CPU memory backbone and Vv link diagnostics before downloading the GAME image and rebooting on the specified slot dinfo Display the status of each file system Y Y volume on this device dir lt vol gt Display the contents of the file system va Y volume specified disable Disable the object at your current location f in the BCC configuration tree BCC configuration read write mode only enable Enable the object at your current location f in the BCC configuration tree BCC configuration read write mode only format lt volume gt Erase the entire contents of the file va system volume specified and reinitialize it to a usable state get lt obj_name gt lt obj_id gt lt attr_name gt Retrieve the values of data objects in the f VY lt attr_id gt lt inst_id gt MIB Technician Interface only getcfg Display network boot parameters VY VY Display
40. and gt You can modify values currently assigned to parameters of SNMP and you can add a community define a trap entity or define a trap event 17 View the parameter definitions using the BCC help command snmp help snmp snmp Parameters state Indicates the administrative state of this object enabled or disabled authentication traps Sends trap for sets from false Mgr or Community lock Allows the locking mechanism to be disabled lock address Allows the lock address to be cleared lock timeout 18 Define the SNMP community public snmp Community public community public 117383 C Rev 00 4 11 Using the Bay Command Console BCC 19 Check the values currently assigned to parameters of this SNMP community community public info on snmp label public access read only scope type 20 To allow network management applications such as Site Manager to modify the device configuration change the value of the access parameter to read write community public access read write community public 21 Define an SNMP manager for the router community public manager Usage manager address lt value gt Or manager lt address gt Required parameter address was not specified for manager The BCC error message indicates what you left out and automatically provides usage Help on how to configure an SNMP manager 22 Try again to add the manager this time supplying a value for its r
41. and then add RIP to IP on that interface Figure 1 3 shows the sequence of commands necessary to build this configuration box ethernet 2 1 Ethernet Slot 2 Connection 1 ethernet 2 1 ip address 1 2 3 4 mask 255 0 0 0 IP Address 1 2 3 4 Mask 255 0 0 0 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip rip 1 2 3 4 rip 1 2 3 4 BCCO0017A Figure 1 3 Configuring IP and RIP on an Ethernet Interface Configuration Context Your working location within the BCC configuration tree is referred to as the context Just as a UNIX file system has a current working directory within which you can add modify or delete files the BCC configuration tree has a current working context within which you can add modify disable reenable or delete objects 117383 C Rev 00 1 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC The BCC understands the context of an object in terms of its location along a path that begins at the root level of the device configuration tree Each semicolon in the path marks a transition from one level to the next branch level in the device configuration tree The semicolon is also equivalent to a Return key entered at the end of a command effectively starting a new command line For example if you configure an IP interface address 1 2 3 4 mask 255 0 0 0 on ethernet 2 1 of a BLN router the BCC understands its location as box ethernet 2 1 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 Figure 1 4 box ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2
42. anges to the active device configuration The source command merges new configuration data from a file with existing data in device memory If the file you specify contains configuration commands pertaining to objects already defined on the device those commands overwrite the current configuration Note If the BCC detects an error in the source file it stops reading commands into the device configuration The BCC imports commands from the file up to but not including the command line where the error occurred Syntax for the source command is as follows source lt volume gt lt filename gt Example source 2 bn cfg Saving the Active Configuration as a Bootable File When you finish using BCC commands to modify an existing configuration save the new configuration to a file on an NVFS flash volume At boot time the router loses any configuration changes not previously saved to an NVFS volume To save config as a bootable binary file on a volume you specify enter save config lt volume gt lt filename gt 117383 C Rev 00 Chapter 4 Tutorial Configuring a Bay Networks Router This chapter provides a tutorial that guides you through the initial configuration of a Bay Networks router using the BCC It includes the following sections Topic Page Creating and Modifying a Device Configuration 4 1 Disabling a Configured Object 4 15 Enabling a Configured Object 4 16 Deleting a C
43. ask value of 255 255 255 224 as follows ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 0 delete ethernet 13 1 ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 10 Check to see what you can configure at this level ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 Sub Contexts arp dvmrp igmp ospf rdisc rip Parameters in Current Context address configured mac address mtu discovery address resolution cost on all subnet broadcast end station support proxy assocaddr host cache aging redirects broadcast mask state cache size mask reply udp checksum System Commands To list all system commands type help commands For detailed help on a specific command type help lt command gt You can modify values currently assigned to parameters of ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 or you can add ARP DVMRP IGMP OSPF Router Discovery or RIP to this interface 11 Add RIP as the routing protocol by default RIP1 on this interface ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 rip rip 192 168 133 114 117383 C Rev 00 4 9 Using the Bay Command Console BCC 12 Return to root box level to configure global system services rip 192 168 133 114 box box 13 Check which global services and interfaces you can configure at this level box Sub Contexts access dns ip serial tunnels atm ethernet ipx snmp virtual backup pool fddi isdn switch syslog wcp board ftp mcel telnet console hssi mct1 tftp demand pool http ntp token rin
44. bject_name gt Example bcc gt show frame relay congestion services stats svcs multiline shaping summary vcs For show commands that have additional keyword levels bcc gt show ip stats cache fragments security datagrams interface summary 117383 C Rev 00 2 27 Using the Bay Command Console BCC To display every filter and filter_argument available for a specific show command insert the where filters and their arguments would appear after any keywords in the command line Example bcc gt show frame relay congestion show frame relay congestion state lt arg gt interface lt arg gt service lt arg gt dlci lt arg gt Usage Notes Use the show command to display routing configuration interface and statistical data from the Management Information Base MIB The type and amount of data displayed depends on the specific protocol network service and or filtered view you want to see Use lowercase for all show commands pattern means that you can use wildcard searching with the and characters Use to find a string of any characters of any length Use to designate any character in a specific position of the search string For example to locate all networks whose addresses begin with 29 enter the search string 29 This pattern will locate the addresses 2901456 and 2967 Or if you have a set of names that begin and end with the same characters but have different characters in the m
45. corresponding mask value as either 255 255 255 0 using dotted decimal notation or 24 the number of bits making up the network portion of the IP interface address as follows ethernet 13 1 ip 192 168 133 114 24 ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 0 The BCC converts the integer representing the number of mask bits into a dotted decimal mask value as shown in the last prompt 8 Check the values currently assigned to parameters of IP on this interface ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 0 info state enabled address 192 168 133 114 mask 255 255 255 0 assocaddr 0 0 0 0 cost 1 broadcast 0 0 0 0 configured mac address 0x mtu discovery off mask reply off all subnet broadcast off address resolution arp proxy off host cache aging cache off udp checksum on end station support off redirects on cache size 128 117383 C Rev 00 Tutorial Configuring a Bay Networks Router 9 Change the subnet mask to 255 255 255 224 ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 0 mask 255 255 255 224 mask parameter may not be modified ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 0 You cannot modify any parameter values included in the BCC instance ID of a configured object in this case ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 0 To change the value of any parameter that is part of a BCC instance ID you must first delete the object then re create it with the desired parameter values In this case you must delete the IP interface and then re create it on ethernet 13 1 using the m
46. ct Using Adobe Acrobat Reader you can open the manuals and release notes search for the sections you need and print them on most standard printers You can download Acrobat Reader free from the Adobe Systems Web site www adobe com You can purchase Bay Networks documentation sets CDs and selected technical publications through the Bay Networks Collateral Catalog The catalog is located on the World Wide Web at support baynetworks com catalog html and is divided into sections arranged alphabetically e The CD ROMs section lists available CDs e The Guides Books section lists books on technical topics e The Technical Manuals section lists available printed documentation sets Make a note of the part numbers and prices of the items that you want to order Use the Marketing Collateral Catalog description link to place an order and to print the order form How to Get Help For product assistance support contracts information about educational services and the telephone numbers of our global support offices go to the following URL http www baynetworks com corporate contacts In the United States and Canada you can dial 800 2LANWAN for assistance 117383 C Rev 00 xvii Chapter 1 Overview of the BCC The BCC is a command line interface for configuring Bay Networks devices After logging on to a device you access the BCC by entering the bec command at the Technician Interface prompt Figure 1 1
47. e Specifies the default volume where transferred files are written retrieved 117383 C Rev 00 4 13 Using the Bay Command Console BCC 30 Check values currently assigned to parameters of FTP ftp info on box state enabled default volume 2 login retries 3 idle timeout 900 max sessions 3 tcp window size 60000 31 Change the default volume number to 5 ftp def 5 ftp 32 Verify the change to the default volume number ftp def default volume 5 33 Recheck the total device configuration ftp show config all box type frecn board slot 5 type sync back board slot 7 type srml back board slot 9 type dtok back board slot 11 type wffddi2m back board slot 13 type genf back console portnum 1 prompt Sslot auto manager script automgr bat auto user script autouser bat back ethernet slot 13 connector 1 circuit name E131 ip address 192 168 133 114 mask 255 255 255 224 remaining configuration not shown here 4 14 117383 C Rev 00 Tutorial Configuring a Bay Networks Router 34 Return to root level ftp box box 35 Save the file using a name other than config until you can test the configuration box save config startup cfg 36 Test the intial IP interface box ping 192 168 133 114 IP ping 192 168 133 114 is alive size 16 bytes 37 Ensure that the initial IP interface connects to another device on the network box ping 192 168 133 97 IP p
48. e enter the exit command at any prompt box exit bec gt When you finish using the BCC enter the exit command at the bcc gt prompt bec gt exit Routerl gt Exiting the BCC returns you to the Technician Interface prompt 2 2 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC For more detailed information about Technician Interface access login or logout procedures see Using Technician Interface Software Displaying Your Location in Configuration Mode In configuration mode the BCC displays a context sensitive prompt The prompt identifies the configured object at your current working location within the configuration hierarchy For example after logging in to a BLN router as Manager then configuring or navigating to the Ethernet interface on slot 2 connector 1 the BCC displays the following prompt ethernet 2 1 To display the complete path from root level to your current level in the device configuration tree enter the pwe print working context command Example rip 192 168 125 34 pwc box ethernet 2 1 ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 rip 192 168 125 34 The pwe command displays the BCC instance identifier of each configured object in the path Navigating in Configuration Mode You can navigate from one object to another in BCC configuration mode by using e The back command e Configuration commands Navigating with the back Command In BCC configuration mode use the back command to move a
49. e Name of the interface Admin State State requested by the user per RFC 1213 Oper State Actual state determined by the system per RFC 1213 Media Type Type of LAN WAN media supporting the interface Protocols Protocols configured on the interface 117383 C Rev 00 D 9 Using the Bay Command Console BCC show process The show process lt option gt commands display information about the use of resources buffers CPU memory lists and so on on the router The show process command supports the following subcommand options buffers detail total list detail total cpu detail total memory detail total buffers detail total Displays the number and percentage of buffers used by all processes on the router The table includes the following information Name Name of the process if you specify the detail option Slot Slot number Used Number of buffers used Used Percentage of buffers used Max Maximum buffers if you specify the total option Free Free buffers if you specify the total option D 10 117383 C Rev 00 System show Commands cpu detail total Displays the CPU usage in hundredths of seconds and the percentage of total CPU time used by all processes on the router detail Displays details about CPU usage for all processes total Displays only CPU statistics totals Note For information about how to obtain a list of available processes see the show proc
50. e vertical line when entering the command Example If the command syntax is show ip alerts routes you enter either show ip alerts or show ip routes but not both 117383 C Rev 00 XV Using the Bay Command Console BCC Acronyms This guide uses the following acronyms ARP Address Resolution Protocol ATM asynchronous transfer mode BCC Bay Command Console DCM data collection module DRAM dynamic random access memory IP Internet Protocol IPX Internetwork Packet Exchange LAN local area network MAC media access control OSPF Open Shortest Path First RIP Routing Information Protocol SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol SRM L system resource module link TCP IP Transmission Control Protocol Internet Protocol TFTP Trivial File Transfer Protocol WAN wide area network ARP Address Resolution Protocol ATM asynchronous transfer mode DCM data collection module DRAM dynamic random access memory IP Internet Protocol xvi 117383 C Rev 00 Preface Related Publications For more information about using the BCC to configure or monitor show behavior of a specific BayRS service refer to the latest edition of the Task Map You can now print Bay Networks technical manuals and release notes free directly from the Internet Go to support baynetworks com library tpubs Find the Bay Networks product for which you need documentation Then locate the specific category and model or version for your hardware or software produ
51. equired parameter address You must enter a value for a required parameter but you can omit the name of the parameter community public manager 0 0 0 0 manager public 0 0 0 0 23 Enable the Telnet server entity on the router manager public 0 0 0 0 telnet telnet server server 24 Add TFTP services globally to the router server tftp tftp The BCC automatically searches back toward root to find the parent context suitable for Telnet and TFTP in this case box The BCC then adds Telnet and TFTP to the device configuration Note the new tftp prompt 4 12 117383 C Rev 00 Tutorial Configuring a Bay Networks Router 25 Check the values currently assigned to parameters of TFTP tftp info on box state enabled default volume 2 retry timeout 5 close timeout 25 retry count 5 26 Change the default volume number for TFTP to 5 tftp def 5 tftp 27 Verify the change to the default volume number tftp def default volume 5 28 Add FTP globally to the router tftp ftp ftp The BCC automatically searches back toward root to find the parent context suitable for FTP in this case box The BCC then adds FTP to the device configuration Note the new tp prompt 29 Check the definitions for parameters of FTP ftp help ftp ftp Parameters Identifies the parent s of this object state Indicates the administrative state of this object enabled or disabled default volum
52. er location in the command line For example the default syntax for configuring an Ethernet interface on an AN ANH ARN or BN router is ethernet lt s ot gt lt connector gt 117383 C Rev 00 3 7 Using the Bay Command Console BCC The following commands are equivalent Using full syntax box ethernet slot 2 connector 1 ethernet 2 1 Using default syntax box ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 1 Using Abbreviated Syntax You can abbreviate BCC configuration commands as follows Example box eth 2 1 This command is the same as the following two commands box ethernet slot 2 connector 1 box ethernet 2 1 If you press Return before entering a sufficient number of characters for the BCC to recognize the name of the object or parameter you want to configure the BCC returns an error message Example box e ambiguous command name e enabl of error ethernet eval exit expr The BCC returns a list of all the commands available in the current context that start with the letter e Choose one command from the list and enter enough characters for the BCC to recognize that command when you press Return You cannot abbreviate BCC instance identifiers 3 8 117383 C Rev 00 Entering Commands and Using Command Files Specifying Parameter Values You must specify each parameter value in the form of a parameter value pair Each pair is a command argument pertaining to the object named first in the
53. ess list command The table includes the following information Name The name of the process Slot Slot number Used Hundredths of seconds used by each process Used Percentage of CPU time used by each process Idle CPU idle time in hundredths of seconds Max Total CPU time in hundredths of seconds list detail total Displays a list of all the processes running on each slot show process list detail total The table includes the following information Name The name of the process Slot Slot number 117383 C Rev 00 D 11 Using the Bay Command Console BCC memory detail total Displays the number of bytes and the percentage of memory used by all processes on the router detail Displays details about the amount of memory used by each process running on the router total Displays only memory usage totals The table includes the following information Name The name of the process if you specify the detail option Slot Slot number Used Number of memory bytes used by each process Used Percentage of memory used by each process Free Number of free buffers on this slot if you specify the total option D 12 117383 C Rev 00 System show Commands show system The show system lt option gt commands display information about the overall system state The show system command supports the following subcommand options buffers memory drivers protocols informatio
54. estions concerning this Agreement contact Bay Networks Inc 4401 Great America Parkway PO Box 58185 Santa Clara California 95054 8185 LICENSEE ACKNOWLEDGES THAT LICENSEE HAS READ THIS AGREEMENT UNDERSTANDS IT AND AGREES TO BE BOUND BY ITS TERMS AND CONDITIONS LICENSEE FURTHER AGREES THAT THIS AGREEMENT IS THE ENTIRE AND EXCLUSIVE AGREEMENT BETWEEN BAY NETWORKS AND LICENSEE WHICH SUPERSEDES ALL PRIOR ORAL AND WRITTEN AGREEMENTS AND COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN THE PARTIES PERTAINING TO THE SUBJECT MATTER OF THIS AGREEMENT NO DIFFERENT OR ADDITIONAL TERMS WILL BE ENFORCEABLE AGAINST BAY NETWORKS UNLESS BAY NETWORKS GIVES ITS EXPRESS WRITTEN CONSENT INCLUDING AN EXPRESS WAIVER OF THE TERMS OF THIS AGREEMENT iv 117383 C Rev 00 Contents Preface Banter ESO Seon ee erence a cone A merece nen mr merrt te mann rt nar xiii Mee dg Ree alc el geeemer er ener mec ree irre reer tern een te rrerr set rer phere Treen racy ter trere ee er rere rer ree tre xiv PROS ata ATAN AA IAIA IO A ieee xvi Related ORG NS ac as scars ea nesta xisisrt scans ate ceayindinoy aae EAAS EEA aE AS NES xvii Fon to Ger HEI esi caer cc it Seated cae G a xvii Chapter 1 Overview of the BCC Piatorm Met c 8 V0 old Lhe neeenrte nearer ee ertee ter trea ree rer terre nr eerie tte rer rrr terre err terre rererr ty tee 1 2 Number of BOC BOSS IS seisen a 1 2 EU a go era E A E T AASA OEE E E E AE E E T 1 2 Terminology and ContepiS iiis aieea is nna e anior a A coealee is 1 3 CT
55. eter and value are required to add a new object or to navigate to an existing object in the device configuration Any object may have one or more required parameters For example to add an Ethernet interface to an AN ANH ARN or BN router enter at root box level ethernet slot lt s ot_no gt connector lt connector_no gt To add an Ethernet interface to an ASN or System 5000 router enter ethernet slot lt s ot_no gt module lt module_no gt connector lt connector_no gt Note You cannot change the value of a parameter used by the BCC to create an instance identifier For example you cannot modify the address value assigned to an IP interface To change the value of any required parameter you must delete the associated object and then add it back into the device configuration with new required values To navigate to an existing previously configured Ethernet interface enter ethernet lt s ot gt lt connector gt AN ANH ARN BN ethernet lt s ot gt lt module gt lt connector gt ASN System 5000 parameter and value is the format for customizing the value of any parameter of the current object or of an object you are adding to the device configuration For more information on how to specify parameter values see Specifying Parameter Values on page 3 9 Using Default Syntax Using default syntax you do not need to enter the name of a required parameter you enter only its value at the prop
56. file into device memory and then run the script by entering an associated command name For information on TCL scripting commands supported by the BCC interface see Appendix C TCL Support Saving Commands and Displays to a File on a Workstation If you log in to a Bay Networks router from a PC or workstation using Telnet or terminal emulation you can use the native capabilities of the PC or workstation to e Save the output of any show config command to an ASCII file e Save the output of any help tree command for later reference or printing e Save a sequence of manually entered BCC commands to an ASCII file e Save log displays to an ASCII file for later analysis You can also use an ASCII text editor on a PC or workstation to create a file containing BCC commands off line You can later download the same file to a Bay Networks device and then use the BCC source command to import the contents of that file into the active device configuration Note You can also save the output of the show config command to an ASCII text file on the router by entering show config all file lt volume gt lt filename gt 117383 C Rev 00 Entering Commands and Using Command Files Saving Configuration Commands to a File on a Bay Networks Device You can save the output of any show config command to a file on a Bay Networks device Output you save to a file using the show config file command does not also appear on the console
57. g Parameters in Current Context build date description mib counters type build version help file name on uptime contact location system name System Commands To list all system commands type help commands For detailed help on a specific command type help lt command gt You can add any of the following global services affecting all slots listed under Sub Contexts access backup pool demand pool dns ftp http ip ipx ntp snmp syslog telnet tftp and wcp You can add any of the following interfaces atm ethernet fddi hssi serial token ring or virtual You can view but not modify the parameters of any board object 14 List the objects already configured at box level box Iso board 11 board 5 board 9 ethernet 13 1 board 13 board 7 console 1 ip box When you added the first instance of IP to the box ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 the BCC automatically created the global IP object at box level 15 Add SNMP to the device box Snmp snmp 4 10 117383 C Rev 00 Tutorial Configuring a Bay Networks Router 16 Check what you can configure next at this level box snmp snmp Sub Contexts community trap entity trap event Parameters in Current Context authentication traps lock timeout state lock on type of service lock address scope delimiter System Commands To list all system commands type help commands For detailed help on a specific command type help lt comm
58. gt interface type ethernet token ring serial etc lt slot_number gt 1 2 3 or 4 depending on the setting of the module ID switch on each ASN lt module gt numbering corresponds to net module numbering 1 through 4 on each ASN lt connector gt numbering starts at 1 on each net module per media type Example ethernet slot 2 module 3 connector 2 This is an Ethernet interface on connector 2 of net module 3 in ASN 2 of a stacked ASN configuration continued 117383 C Rev 00 E 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Table E 1 Syntax for Specifying Module Location per Device continued Platform Syntax ARN lt interface gt lt slot gt lt connector gt e lt interface gt interface type ethernet token ring serial etc e lt slot gt 1 The ARN is a 1 slot device lt connector gt numbering depends on the port type LAN or WAN LAN connector numbering starts at 1 on the base module which contains only LAN ports LAN connector numbering continues in ascending order starting with the first LAN port on an ARN expansion module The ARN expansion module plugs into the ARN base module WAN connector numbering starts with connector 1 on WAN adapter module 1 continues with connector 2 on WAN adapter module 2 and ascends sequentially with WAN connectors 3 through non the ARN expansion module Adapter modules Expansion module uU we OV DE
59. he system searches the volumes listed in Initial Search Path User s AutoScript Name of the script to run when the User account logs in to the router If the script name does not contain a volume specifier the system searches the volumes listed in Initial Search Path History Depth Maximum number of Technician Interface commands stored in the local command history table The table stores each command you enter at the prompt on a first in first out FIFO basis files to autosave Number of times that the system saves the events log to a new file automatically when the log is full Volume for The target volume where the system stores new log files saved autosave through the log autosave feature Displays login information and console port error statistics The table includes the following information Port Number Port Name Port State Total Logins User Login Errors Manager Login Errors Other Login Errors TTY Frame Errors TTY Overrun Errors TTY Parity Errors TTY FIFO Errors Port number for the information displayed Corresponding port name Port s current state Absent Disabled Down Init or Up Number of logins failed and successful on the console port Number of failed login attempts that the User login account has made on the console port Number of failed login attempts that the Manager login account has made on the console port Number of failed login attempts made by logi
60. he values fault warning info trace and debug as follows severity mask fault warning info trace debug Notice that you must enter these values within braces and with a space character after each value except the last The BCC uses the space character as a delimiter separating each of the values Parameters of this data type also typically accept the values none or all but you can enter these without braces for example severity mask all severity mask none Specifying Name or String Values Many BCC configuration parameters accept an alphanumeric string values Typically these are name parameters with values that do not include space characters Examples polname abc123 polname abc 123 polname ABC 123 To enter an alphanumeric string that includes spaces enclose the entire value within braces for example polname Abc 123 For parameters of this datatype the BCC treats any space characters between the braces as part of the alphanumeric string 3 10 117383 C Rev 00 Entering Commands and Using Command Files Disabling Reenabling and Deleting a Configured Object Use the commands in Table 3 2 to disable reenable and delete any object in the current configuration context or the immediate adjacent subcontext Table 3 2 BCC Commands for Disabling Reenabling and Deleting Enter To Perform the Following Function disable Change the state of a configured object to disabled ip
61. iddle such as xxx1 yy xxx2 yy and so on you can enter the search pattern xxx yy to locate them 2 28 117383 C Rev 00 Chapter 3 Entering Commands and Using Command Files This chapter provides information about the following topics Topic Page Entering Commands 3 1 System Commands 3 5 Configuration Command Syntax 3 5 Creating and Using BCC Files 3 12 Entering Commands This section contains information about e Using Command Abbreviations e Recalling Commands e Editing Command Lines e Entering Multiple Commands on a Line e Continuing a Command Line 117383 C Rev 00 3 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Using Command Abbreviations When you enter BCC commands in configuration mode you can shorten object and parameter names for example eth ethernet You must enter a sufficient number of characters for the BCC to recognize that name uniquely Example box eth 5 1 ethernet 5 1 back box tf tfitp You can abbreviate system commands for example the BCC recognizes sh as show in contexts where there are no other commands configurable objects or parameter names that also start with sh Recalling Commands The BCC supports a configurable command history buffer from which you can recall commands recently entered The command history buffer contains up to 20 commands by default You can increase the number of commands in the history buffer to a maxi
62. includes the following information Slot Slot number Local Memory Total memory capacity in megabytes of the processor on the slot Global Memory Current memory configuration in megabytes of the processor on the slot Total Memory Total local and global memory in megabytes proms Displays PROM information for all slots The table includes the revision and build date of the bootstrap PROM and the diagnostics PROM slots Displays hardware information about all slots in the system The table includes information about the processor module and link module for each slot as well as the module type revision and serial number The revision and serial numbers are in decimal format For the AN the table indicates that the AN has an 802 3 repeater HUB by indicating that the link module is an ANSEDSH For the ASN the table displays the revision and serial number of the chassis processor module and the network module type revision and serial number D 8 117383 C Rev 00 System show Commands show interface The show interface command displays information about all media specific interfaces configured on the device This command has only one option summary summary Displays high level information about each media specific interface To see greater detail use a show lt media_type gt command such as show ethernet lt option gt The table for show interface summary includes the following information Interface Nam
63. ing 192 168 133 97 is alive size 16 bytes 38 When you finish configuring the router exit configuration mode box exit bec gt 39 Exit the BCC which returns you to the Technician Interface prompt bec gt exit Routerl gt 40 Enter the logout command to close your console or Telnet session with the router Router1 gt logout Disabling a Configured Object In most cases the BCC automatically enables objects that you add to the device configuration However you can disable an object to manage or troubleshoot the device Here is a BN router example of how to disable an object rip on ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 1 Specify the configuration context for the object you want to disable box ethernet 2 1 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip rip 1 2 3 4 2 Disable RIP rip 1 2 3 4 disable rip 1 2 3 4 117383 C Rev 00 4 15 Using the Bay Command Console BCC 3 Verify that you disabled RIP rip 1 2 3 4 state state disabled rip 1 2 3 4 You can also disable an object from its parent context using the following syntax disable lt BCC_instance_identifier gt Example ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 disable rip 1 2 3 4 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 Using this method you remain in the current context after disabling the branch object Enabling a Configured Object If you disable a configured object you can use the BCC enable command to reenable that object Here is a BN router example of how to enable an object rip prev
64. ing Coniguraton OMICS c isacs ccsccnntes aaceaderenceenute aniddantaeedesdeandee aa 2 20 Displaying the Total Device Configuration Tree All Available Choices 2 21 Displaying Choices Available from the Current Context ceee Ea 2 22 Displaying Choices Available at All Subcontext Levels 0 cececeeeeeeeeees 2 22 Displaying Parameter Definitions ccicscccecstenecenedeancnerneatceaancasiadenndasdebennetacnne 2 23 Saving Displayed Configuration Data 06 ETE ore AT PT S 2 26 Displaying Help an System Commands caurdcisonniissninasii a 2 26 Displaying Help on Show Commands ccccccccetcdeicetasccssesssaieseecusdvaencuntendeecansenenntannie 2 26 Chapter 3 Entering Commands and Using Command Files Emengo NTI ania a Eiaa kaa aa iaia 3 1 Using Command Abbreviations oneess aibri eee Pee koant ee T EE Fecalng Comnmianid E arrsiiipiasi n E A S 3 2 Edwing command LINES sorssionitar a re errr rer one To 3 3 Entering Multiple Commands on A LiNE sicccccsctccesscsesonsnscecanvatsenasccnretinnantdeneedoconeeaace 3 4 Continuing a command LINE mensmannmiananssieini a an aa System Commands seeee isd mains AEAEE AEE ATT PE A Saboia centile re vi 117383 C Rev 00 Goniiguraion Command SAK grasses prresiaasiriodeneten aes anh peti ace Command Syntax ReguirermnmeniS sss iccersscaearderratennsias svomsesaaanehanadootsetaduninaice 3 6 Using Basie FU GYMAR set cctestecngesty eae ie here create a ae aE 3
65. initions for any object within the device configuration tree enter help lt object_name gt object_name is the BCC designation for any object interface protocol or other configurable item that you can configure using the BCC interface 117383 C Rev 00 2 23 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Example ethernet 2 1 help ethernet Usage ethernet slot lt value gt connector lt value gt Or ethernet lt slot gt lt connector gt ethernet Parameters state Indicates the administrative state of this object enabled or disabled bofl Allows breath of life polls to be disabled bofl retries Specifies the BOFL Retry Count If the object_name is unique among all object names in the BCC configuration tree the BCC displays the parameter definitions you requested If the object_name is not unique among all object names the same name exists in multiple locations in the BCC configuration tree the BCC returns a list of the all help commands that lead to an object that contains the object_name you specified For example you may want to see the definitions for all parameters of ip but IP has a global component and can exist in any interface context as well The name ip also exists in ipx which causes the BCC to list the help commands for every ip and ipx object 2 24 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC This happens when you enter help ip ethernet 13 1 help ip he
66. iously disabled on ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 1 Specify the configuration context for RIP box ethernet 2 1 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip rip 1 2 3 4 2 Reenable RIP rip 1 enable Tipis 3 Verify that you reenabled RIP tip is2 34 state state enabled rip 1 2 3 4 2 3 4 2 3 4 You can also enable an object from its parent context using the following syntax enable lt BCC_instance_identifier gt 4 16 117383 C Rev 00 Tutorial Configuring a Bay Networks Router Example ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 enable rip 1 2 3 4 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 Using this method you remain in the current context after enabling the branch object Deleting a Configured Object Because of the tree hierarchy objects on higher branches of the tree depend on the state and existence of objects closer to the root of the tree Deleting an object also deletes anything configured on that object Caution Before using the BCC to delete an interface make sure that you did not use Site Manager to configure it with a protocol that the BCC does not recognize If you did use Site Manager to delete the interface Here is a BN router example of how to delete an IP interface from the active device configuration 1 Navigate to the object you want to delete box ethernet 13 1 ethernet 13 1 ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 2 List all objects configured on the current object ip 192 168 133
67. ject plus any other configuration data implied by the BCC only command filters a r v c and f See Displaying Current Active Configuration Data source lt vol gt lt filename gt Read BCC configuration or TCL scripting f commands from a text file source aliases env perm Read a list of aliases environment VY lt vol gt lt filename gt variables or dynamic permissions from a Technician Interface only file stamp Display the device image version name W VY and timestamp system Start a new Technician Interface session Sf U that allows you to run system manager Technician Interface only privileged commands telnet d e lt escape_char gt Communicate with other hosts A VY lt host_ip gt lt port gt supporting the Telnet protocol Technician Interface and BCC top level only not available in BCC configuration mode continued 117383 C Rev 00 B 9 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Table B 1 System Commands continued Command Purpose Login Access Privileges Manager User tftp get put lt address gt lt vol gt lt filename gt lt vol gt lt filename gt Technician Interface and bcc gt top level only Send files to or retrieve files from other hosts supporting TFTP Vv type x lt vol gt lt filename gt xmodem rb sb y w p n lt filename gt Display the contents of the designated file in ASCII or HEX x fo
68. le box access and enter values or accept the default values for the following parameters Table 4 1 Table 4 1 Access Parameter Options Parameter Description Default Options maximum login length Maximum number of characters allowed 16 1 16 for a login name minimum login length Minimum number of characters allowed 4 1 16 for a login name maximum group length Maximum number of characters allowed 16 1 16 for a group name minimum group length Minimum number of characters allowed 4 1 16 for a group name maximum password length Maximum number of characters allowed 16 1 16 for a password minimum password length Minimum number of characters allowed 0 0 16 for a password configuration accounts Enable or disable the configuration of enabled enabled disabled accounts For example to set the minimum password length to 6 characters enter box access access minimum password length 6 access 117383 C Rev 00 A 3 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Configuring User Configuring the user object lets you set the profile for an individual user To configure user navigate to the users prompt for example box access users and enter values or accept the default values for the following parameters Table 4 2 Table 4 2 User Parameter Options Parameter Description Default Options state Administrative state of this object enabled enabled disabled login
69. lows on the serial port If the maximum occurs the system hangs up on the line causing a modem connection to lose carrier detect Number of minutes allowed between when the system displays the login banner and a user enters a login ID relevant only if modem control is enabled If this timeout occurs the system hangs up on the line Number of minutes allowed to enter a password If this timeout period expires the system hangs up on the line Command line timeout value relevant only if modem control is enabled If you do not enter a command in this number of minutes the system hangs up on the serial port Switch to execute control C to break out of the user autoscript When a user autoscript is in effect and this parameter is enabled you can break out of the script when logged in as User but not as Manager Also if this parameter is enabled and the script terminates due to an error the system automatically logs you out List of file system volumes to be searched when you run a script without a volume specifier or if an autoscript does not contain a volume specifier The environment variable PATH is set to this string The string format is as follows lt vol gt lt vol gt Example 2 3 4 5 117383 C Rev 00 D 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC stats Manager s Name of the script to run when the Manager account logs in to the AutoScript router If the script name does not contain a volume specifier t
70. lp ip is ambiguous Copy and r nter one of the following commands help atm classical ip service ip help atm lec service ip help atm lec service ipx help atm pvc service ip help atm pvc service ipx help box ip help box ipx help demand pool demand circuit frame relay default service ip help demand pool demand circuit frame relay default service ipx help serial ppp ipx help serial ppp ipxwan help serial standard ip help serial standard ipx help token ring ip help token ring ipx help virtual ip Note that the response starts with Copy and re enter one of the following commands For example if you copy and re enter the explicit command help ethernet ip the BCC immediately displays usage help and parameter definitions for that particular ip ethernet 13 1 help ethernet ip Usage ip address lt value gt mask lt value gt Or ip lt address gt lt mask gt ip Parameters state Indicates the administrative state of this object enabled or disabled address REQUIRED Specifies the IP address of this interface address resolution Specifies the address resolution type 117383 C Rev 00 2 25 Using the Bay Command Console BCC If you want to display the definition for a specific parameter of the current object only just enter help parameter_name By default the BCC displays the entire list of parameter defintions for the current object Saving Displayed C
71. marks of Microsoft Corporation All other trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners Restricted Rights Legend Use duplication or disclosure by the United States Government is subject to restrictions as set forth in subparagraph c 1 i of the Rights in Technical Data and Computer Software clause at DFARS 252 227 7013 Notwithstanding any other license agreement that may pertain to or accompany the delivery of this computer software the rights of the United States Government regarding its use reproduction and disclosure are as set forth in the Commercial Computer Software Restricted Rights clause at FAR 52 227 19 Statement of Conditions In the interest of improving internal design operational function and or reliability Bay Networks Inc reserves the right to make changes to the products described in this document without notice Bay Networks Inc does not assume any liability that may occur due to the use or application of the product s or circuit layout s described herein Portions of the code in this software product may be Copyright 1988 Regents of the University of California All rights reserved Redistribution and use in source and binary forms of such portions are permitted provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are duplicated in all such forms and that any documentation advertising materials and other materials related to such distribution and use ackno
72. mes passwords and access privileges e View event logs showing each BCC command executed and the user name that executed the command 117383 C Rev 00 A 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Multiuser Access Login To access a Bay Networks router using this feature enter your login ID at the login prompt and enter your password at the Password prompt on your Telnet or console display Login lt login id gt Password lt password gt The Technician Interface prompt should appear enabling you to subsequently enter the bec command to start the BCC interface Configuring Multiuser Access Multiuser access is configured by default at the root level Information about the default Manager and User logins is stored in nonvolatile RAM NVRAM Information about other configured users is stored in the device configuration file passwords encrypted Only one user can make changes to the configuration at a time Figure 4 3 shows the multiuser access configuration branch box m access users user groups group audit BCC0025A Figure 4 3 Configurable Multiuser Access Objects A 2 117383 C Rev 00 Multi User Access Configuring Access The access object lets you set the minimum and maximum character string lengths for user and group names and passwords You can also enable or disable the configuration of accounts from the access prompt To configure access navigate to the access prompt for examp
73. mmand type help lt command gt ethernet 13 1 Based on the Sub Contexts list you can add autoneg Ethernet speed autonegotiation ip interface IP or ipx interface IPX to this Ethernet port The list of configurable objects depends on the board type described in the current prompt For example 1OOBASE T modules additionally allow you to configure an autoneg autonegotiation object at this level You can also modify the values currently assigned to Parameters in Current Context parameters of ethernet 13 1 shown above Note For the BCC to display the list of system commands in response to help commands you must have e A copy of bcc help on a memory card in the device e Configured the location of the help file usually 2 bcc help by assigning that value to the help file name parameter of the root level object box or stack 117383 C Rev 00 4 7 Using the Bay Command Console BCC 7 Add IP address 192 168 133 114 to ethernet 13 1 ethernet 13 1 ip 192 168 133 114 Usage ip address lt value gt mask lt value gt Or ip lt address gt lt mask gt Required parameter mask was not specified for ip The error message appears because the BCC requires you to enter a mask value whenever you create an IP interface Because the first octet of the address is 192 OxCO this is a Class C address requiring the first 3 octets to be the network portion of the interface address You can express the
74. mmand to obtain essentially the same information in a more terse format ethernet 2 1 info bofl timeout 5 To display the most detailed information on values for the same parameter use the command ethernet 2 1 bofl timeout Current Value 5 Legal Values lt unsigned integer gt Default Value 5 To display the value assigned to any parameter of an object configured at the next subcontext level first obtain a list objects configured at the next subcontext level ethernet 2 1 Iso ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 2 16 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC Next copy and paste into the current command line the BCC instance identifier of the desired object followed by the name of the parameter you want to check for current value as follows ethernet 2 1 ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 address resolution address resolution arp For the most detailed information on the same parameter use the command ethernet 2 1 ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 address resolution Current Value arp Legal Values arp ddn pdn in arp arp in arp none bfe ddn probe arp probe atm arp Default Value arp Displaying All Parameter Values of an Object To display parameter settings for the current object use the info or show config verbose commands Example using the into command ethernet 2 1 info slot 2 circuit name E21 alpha state enabled connector 1 bofl enable bofl timeout
75. mum of 40 by setting new values for the history parameter of the console and telnet objects Example box telnet telnet server server history 30 server history history 30 server box box Console portnum 1 console 1 history 30 console 1l Recall commands from the history buffer as follows e To recall the previous command press the up arrow key or press Control p e To recall the next command press the down arrow key or press Control n 3 2 117383 C Rev 00 Entering Commands and Using Command Files Editing Command Lines Table 3 1 describes the keystrokes you can use to edit BCC command lines Table 3 1 Keystrokes for Editing BCC Command Lines Editing Function Keystrokes Move the cursor left CONTROL b or left arrow key Move the cursor right CONTROL f or right arrow key Delete the current line CONTROL u Delete the word at the cursor location CONTROL w Delete the character at the cursor location CONTROL d Move the cursor to the beginning of the line CONTROL a Move the cursor to the end of the line CONTROL e Toggle insert mode CONTROL 0 Delete previous character BKSP or DEL or CONTROL h Interrupt CONTROL c Start echo to the screen CONTROL q Stop echo to the screen CONTROL s Recall previous command CONTROL p or up arrow key Recall next command CONTROL n or down arrow key For example use the up arrow key o
76. n accounts other than User and Manager on the console port Number of frame errors on the console port Number of overrun errors on the console port Number of parity errors on the console port Number of FIFO errors on the console port A high number of errors over a short period of time may indicate a problem with the line D 6 117383 C Rev 00 System show Commands show hardware The show hardware lt option gt commands display information about router hardware The show hardware command supports the following subcommand options backplane memory lt slot gt config file roms image slots backplane config_file image Displays information about the state of the backplane hardware The table includes the backplane type revision and serial number The revision and serial numbers are in decimal format Displays the configuration file used to boot the router or reset a slot The table shows the volume and file name used as the source of the configuration The table also shows the date and load time Displays the router s software image for each slot including the integration that is the source of the image the date and time of the image s creation and the file name that contains the image 117383 C Rev 00 D 7 Using the Bay Command Console BCC memory lt slot gt Displays memory configuration and capacity information about all slots or a specific slot The table
77. n all slots in the system If the configuration displayed differs from that expected your configuration file may be incorrect wrong protocol specified for example or there may be a problem loading the software D 14 117383 C Rev 00 System show Commands tasks Displays the number of tasks scheduled to run on all slots This number is highly volatile and a large In Queue value does not necessarily indicate a problem The table includes the following information Slot Slot number Total Total number of tasks running on each slot In_Queue Number of tasks scheduled to run in Queue Percentage of tasks scheduled to run 117383 C Rev 00 D 15 Table E 1 Appendix E Syntax for Module Location Table E 1 lists the syntax for specifying the physical location of a module for each Bay Networks device that the BCC supports Syntax for Specifying Module Location per Device Platform Syntax AN ANH lt interface gt lt slot gt lt connector gt lt interface gt interface type ethernet token ring serial etc e lt slot gt 1 AN ANH is a one slot device lt connector gt numbering starts with connector 1 Example ethernet slot 1 connector 3 This is an Ethernet interface configured on AN ANH connector 3 which exists on an Ethernet adapter module Connectors 1 and 2 are on the base module ASN lt interface gt lt slot gt lt module gt lt connector gt lt interface
78. n slot 5 back board slot 7 type srml System resource module in slot 7 back board slot 9 type dtok Dual token ring link module in slot 9 back board slot 11 type wffddi2m Multimode FDDI link module in slot 11 back board slot 13 type genf Quad Ethernet with filters in slot 13 back console portnum 1 console device on port 1 prompt Sslot auto manager script automgr bat auto user script autouser bat back back box Note how output of the show config command automatically includes navigation back commands If you save this output to a file you can reenter the commands automatically using the BCC source command See Importing Configuration Commands from a File on page 3 14 For descriptions of the values of the board type parameter see the Release Notes 5 Choose a port interface type slot and connector for the initial IP interface to the router box ethernet slot 13 connector 1 ethernet 13 1 4 6 117383 C Rev 00 Tutorial Configuring a Bay Networks Router 6 Check to see what you can configure sub contexts and parameters at this level ethernet 13 1 Sub Contexts auto neg ip ipx Parameters in Current Context bofl circuit name receive queue length bofl retries connector slot bofl timeout hardware filter state bofl tmo divisor on transmit queue length System Commands To list all system commands type help commands For detailed help on a specific co
79. n tasks buffers Displays the current buffer usage for all active slots on the router Because buffers circulate rapidly through the system a low free percentage does not necessarily indicate a buffer shortage it may be a transient condition The table includes the following information Slot Slot number Used Number of buffers used by each process Free Percentage of free buffers on each slot Total Total number of buffers available Free Total number of free buffers drivers Displays link modules and drivers installed on all slots If the configuration displayed differs from that expected your configuration file may be incorrect wrong module type specified for example or there may be a problem loading the software 117383 C Rev 00 D 13 Using the Bay Command Console BCC information Displays general system information system name contact node location image data MIB version and total uptime since last cold boot memory Displays the global memory usage for all active slots in the system Memory usage is not as volatile as buffer usage so a low free percentage may indicate that you need more memory The table includes the following information Slot Slot number Total Total number of memory DRAM bytes available on each slot Used Number of memory bytes used on each slot Free Amount of free memory on each slot Free Percentage of free memory on each slot protocols Displays the protocols installed o
80. names of parameters of the current object lt parameter_name gt or lt adjacent_object_name gt lt parameter_name gt Display the current legal and default values for any parameter of the current object or for any parameter of an object at the next adjacent subcontext level in the device configuration tree help tree Display the objects available at every level on the current branch starting from your current location help tree all Display the entire tree of objects available for you to configure on this device 2 20 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC Displaying the Total Device Configuration Tree All Available Choices To display from any BCC prompt every object you can choose to add to the current device configuration use the help tree all command Example BCN router box help tree all The entire configuration tree is board virtual ip ospf neighbor ftp http ntp peer snmp community manager trap entity trap event tftp console telnet client server atm atm interface signaling timers signaling vc ilmi ilmi vc sscop 117383 C Rev 00 2 21 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Displaying Choices Available from the Current Context To list the names of all objects and parameters you can access from the current context in configuration mode enter the command Example ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 Sub Contexts arp igmp os
81. ng braces brackets and quotation marks Example box box_ wit box 3 4 117383 C Rev 00 Entering Commands and Using Command Files Note If you inadvertently type one of the opening symbols and see an underscore prompt just type the corresponding closing symbol to restore the normal prompt in BCC configuration mode System Commands The BCC supports all system commands described in Appendix B For Help on a specific command enter help lt command gt Example help pwc Configuration Command Syntax This section describes BCC configuration commands and the syntax requirements for those commands This section also describes how to enter BCC configuration commands using the following formats e Basic full syntax e Default syntax e Abbreviated syntax Caution Configuration commands make real time changes to the device configuration 117383 C Rev 00 3 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Command Syntax Requirements BCC syntax consists of object names parameter names and values and various types of punctuation e All object and parameter names appear as one word hyphenated where necessary in the BCC command line e Parameters have either a single value or multiple values enclosed in braces x y z in the command line You can accept the default value or supply a value for each parameter associated with a configurable object e Parameters and their
82. ng from root readexe lt vol gt lt filename gt Validate the checksums of an executable f VY image and print out all the file header information record open close fileonly pause Record to a file all messages written to W lt vol gt lt filename gt the terminal You can open pause and close a recording session Technician Interface only reset lt s ot_ D gt Reboot the GAME image on the VY specified slot If the slot ID argument is absent reboot the entire device restart lt s ot_ D gt Restart the GAME image on the va specified slot If the slot ID argument is absent the GAME image restarts on all slots continued 117383 C Rev 00 System Commands Table B 1 System Commands continued Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User rm lt vol gt lt filename gt Remove delete the file from the VY specified volume BCC only save config aliases log Store the current configuration alias list f lt vol gt lt filename gt or system event securelogin Turn SecurlD access to the device on VY and off via Telnet set lt obj_name gt lt obj_id gt lt attr_name gt Modifies data objects in the MIB VY lt attr_id gt lt inst_id gt lt value gt Technician Interface only show config all recursive verbose Display the active configuration of the VY VY compact file lt filenames gt compact current ob
83. ollowing subcommand options active groups lock users Displays information about each active user The table includes the following information Login id Login Time Idle Time State From Port Last Command groups Login name of this user Time this user logged in Time elapsed since the last command was issued State of this user config or active Originating IP address or console Port from which this user is accessing the device Last command issued by this user Displays information about each active group The table includes the following information Group Name State Privileges Audit Group number Group name State of this group enabled disabled Privilege level for this group Privilege level activity to include in the audit log 117383 C Rev 00 lock System show Commands Displays information about the lock status of the user currently in configuration mode The table includes the following information users Slot Lock User From Port Idle Time Device number of the slot being accessed User currently in configuration mode Originating IP address or console Port from which this user is accessing the device Time elapsed time since the last command was issued Displays information about each active user s profile The table includes the following information Login Name State True Name Groups Audit Login name of this user State of this user
84. on file ti cfg This example creates the following objects in the total router configuration Figure 4 1 e IP global ARP global on IP RIP global on IP e SNMP global Community public on SNMP Manager address 0 0 0 0 on community public e FTP global e TFTP global e Telnet global Server global on Telnet e Quad Ethernet interface in slot 13 IP interface address 192 168 133 114 on Ethernet connector 1 ARP on IP interface 192 168 133 114 RIP on IP interface 192 168 133 114 e Serial interface in slot 5 e Dual token ring interface in slot 9 e FDDI interface in slot 11 4 2 117383 C Rev 00 serial 5 1 Figure 4 1 N D D T oO I lt je Tutorial Configuring a Bay Networks Router ES ip community public Global Services manager 0 0 0 0 ethernet 13 1 ethernet 13 2 ethernet 13 3 ethernet 13 4 fddi 11 1 arp rip Sample BCC Configuration BCN Router After you create a diagram of the device configuration tree configure the device using a cycle of BCC configuration commands similar to those shown in Figure 4 2 117383 C Rev 00 Using the Bay Command Console BCC START CONTINUE Current Enter the name of e prompt any changed parameter to verify its new assigned value Where necessary enter the name of any parameter with a new value for example bofl disabled Enter info to check parameter values
85. onfig compact ethernet slot 2 connector 1 circuit name E21 alpha Or from any context supply the BCC instance ID box show config compact ethernet 2 1 ethernet slot 2 connector 1 circuit name E21 alpha To display the entire device configuration in compact format add the all option box show config all compact box type freln build version BayRS 13 10 BCC 4 10 contact system name lab location Billerica help file name bcc help board slot 1 type srml board slot 2 type genf board slot 3 type wffddi2m board slot 5 type dtok ftp default volume 2 snmp lock address 255 255 255 255 community label public 117383 C Rev 00 2 15 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Displaying Configured Parameter Values You can display values configured for any specific parameter or all parameters of e The current object e An object configured at the next subcontext level e An object you specify by BCC instance identifier e Objects configured at all subcontext levels beyond your current location or ID specified location in the active device configuration Displaying the Value of One Parameter To display the value assigned to a specific parameter of the current object or an object configured at the next subcontext level just enter the parameter name ethernet 2 1 bofl timeout bofl timeout 5 The BCC returns the name and value assigned to the parameter you specified You can also use the info co
86. onfiguration Data For more information on using the show config file command to save configuration data to a file refer to Saving Configuration Commands to a File on a Bay Networks Device on page 3 13 Displaying Help on System Commands Table 2 1 lists the commands that explain how to use BCC system commands Table 2 1 Help for BCC System Commands Command Help Feature help Get an overview of Help oriented command features help lt command gt Get full details on a specific command help commands Display the syntax of all BCC commands in alphabetical order help commands more Display the syntax and brief command descriptions for all BCC commands in alphabetical order help editing Get Help on how to edit BCC commands and command lines help learning bcc Get Help on performing common BCC operations This command provides a microtutorial on how to use the BCC interface help syntax Get Help on how to interpret symbols used to describe BCC command syntax Displaying Help on Show Commands BCC show commands use the following syntax show lt object_name gt lt keywora gt lt keyword gt lt filter gt lt filter_argument gt lt filter gt lt filter_argument gt object_name is the name of a configured object such as ip ethernet or dns The only exception to this rule is show config described in Displaying Configuration Data on page 2 8 2 26 117383 C
87. onfigured Object 4 17 Creating and Modifying a Device Configuration You configure a Bay Networks device by defining a set of objects starting at the root level of the device s configuration hierarchy Each object has a set of parameters with values set either by you or by the device software Following is a typical BCC configuration sequence 1 2 3 Open a Technician Interface session and start the BCC interface Start BCC configuration mode Use BCC configuration commands to create new objects in the device configuration and modify default values for parameters of each object to meet the requirements of your network Enable any box wide protocols not enabled automatically by the BCC for example TFTP and Telnet Server Use the save command to save your configuration as a bootable binary file on the device Exit BCC configuration mode exit the BCC to the Technician Interface and log out of the device 117383 C Rev 00 4 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC You may find it helpful to first diagram what you want to configure in terms of the BCC configuration tree or hierarchy for the device Refer to the following sample router configuration Sample Router Configuration The following example shows a sequence of commands you can use to configure a BCN router on a network You first complete the physical installation of the router then boot the router using the image bn exe and the minimum configurati
88. or lt commana gt lt object gt List parameters of an object you can access or configure from your current level in the device configuration tree lt parameter gt List the current default and legal values for this parameter of the current object lt object gt lt parameter gt List the current default and legal values for the specified parameter of this object lt n gt Repeat the last command or repeat the A Technician Interface only last command lt n gt times back lt n gt Move your current working location back f VY lt n gt levels closer to the root level of the BCC configuration mode only BCC configuration tree bcc Start the BCC from the Technician A V Interface prompt boot lt vol gt lt image_name gt Reboot the system VY lt vol gt lt config_name gt cd lt vol gt lt directory gt Set or display the current working volume VY and directory clear lt subcommands gt lt flags gt Clear specific device information such A as IP and RIP data clearlog lt s ot_ D gt Clear all previous events from the system f event log commit Commit make effective new values that you assign to MIB attributes continued 117383 C Rev 00 Table B 1 System Commands System Commands continued Command Purpose Login Access Privileges Manager User compact lt volume gt Compact existing files into a contiguous address space on a volume
89. parameters defined 1 10 diagnostics PROM revision date D 8 disable command 3 11 4 15 E editing commands 3 3 educational services xvii enable command 3 11 4 16 entering the BCC 2 1 exiting the BCC 2 1 G global objects defined 1 7 Index 1 H hardware information D 7 Help commands 2 26 B 4 history buffer 3 2 image software D 7 instance identifier 1 7 2 6 interface defined 1 10 L line defined 1 9 location in configuration hierarchy 2 3 login privileges and procedures 2 1 Manager User privilege levels 2 2 memory hardware D 8 system D 14 multiuser access access object A 3 audit object A 5 configuring A 2 group object A 4 login A 2 user object A 4 N navigating using configuration commands 2 4 using the back command 2 3 Index 2 O objects defined 1 6 deleting 4 17 disabling 4 15 enabling 4 16 online Help BCC 2 26 optional parameters defined 1 10 P parameters defined 1 10 specifying values for 3 9 path specifying 2 6 2 7 port defined 1 9 product support xvii PROM information hardware D 8 protocols show system command D 14 publications Bay Networks xvii pwc command 2 3 R reading commands from a file 3 14 recalling commands 3 2 required 3 7 required parameters defined 1 10 S saving configuration commands 3 12 serial port configuration D 4 error statistics D 6 show commands access D 2 console
90. pf rdisc rip Parameters in Current Context address cost on address resolution end station support proxy all subnet broadcast has redirects assocaddr host cache aging state broadcast mask udp checksum cache size mask reply configured mac address mtu discovery The Sub Contexts section lists the objects that you can add from your current location in the device configuration tree Figure 2 4 ee reate OSPF automatically IGMP RDISC with IP Figure 2 4 BCC0019A Objects You Can Configure at the Next Subcontext Level Displaying Choices Available at All Subcontext Levels To list the objects you can access and add to the device configuration from your current location in BCC configuration mode enter the help tree command This is an easy way to see the navigational path you must follow to configure an object several levels away from your current location 2 22 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC Example ethernet 2 1 help tree The configuration tree below this context is ip arp rip ospf neighbor rdisc igmp relay ipx rip sap static route adjacent host static service route filter server network filter server name filter auto neg Entering the help tree command at root level box or stack is the same as entering the help tree all command from any configuration context Displaying Parameter Definitions To display configuration syntax usage help and parameter def
91. r Control p to retrieve your last input then use other control key combinations to edit the command line as needed 117383 C Rev 00 3 3 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Entering Multiple Commands on a Line To enter multiple commands on the same line type a semicolon wherever you would press Return to terminate a command Example Configure ethernet 2 1 from root then configure ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 on ethernet 2 1 and RIP on ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 as follows box ethernet 2 1 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip rip 1 2 3 4 Continuing a Command Line You can continue a command line by entering a backslash character at the end of the current text line The BCC treats characters on the next physical line as part of the same BCC logical command line You must immediately follow the backslash with a newline Return character The BCC treats these two characters and any trailing spaces as if they were exactly one space Until you press Return without a preceding backslash character the BCC replaces the pound symbol in the context sensitive prompt with an underscore _ character Example ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 cost 2 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0_ mask reply on ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0_ proxy on ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0_ aging cache on ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 Some command symbols normally used in pairs to denote the beginning and the end of a set of data also produce the continuation underscore prompt includi
92. r manuals or any copy in whole or in part Except as expressly provided in this Agreement Licensee may not copy or transfer the Software or user manuals in whole or in part The Software and user manuals embody Bay Networks and its licensors confidential and proprietary intellectual property Licensee shall not sublicense assign or otherwise disclose to any third party the Software or any information about the operation design performance or implementation of the Software and user manuals that is confidential to Bay Networks and its licensors however Licensee may grant permission to its consultants subcontractors and agents to use the Software at Licensee s facility provided they have agreed to use the Software only in accordance with the terms of this license 3 Limited warranty Bay Networks warrants each item of Software as delivered by Bay Networks and properly installed and operated on Bay Networks hardware or other equipment it is originally licensed for to function substantially as described in its accompanying user manual during its warranty period which begins on the date Software is first shipped to Licensee If any item of Software fails to so function during its warranty period as the sole remedy Bay Networks will at its discretion provide a suitable fix patch or workaround for the problem that may be included in a future Software release Bay Networks further warrants to Licensee that the media on which the Software is
93. rameters are a minimum set of parameters for which the BCC requires you to supply values For example the required parameters of a physical port are slot and connector Derived Derived parameters are parameters for which the BCC supplies a value For example a derived parameter of the global OSPF object is router id In this case the BCC derives a value for router id from the address of the first IP interface configured on the device Optional Optional parameters are parameters for which you can specify customized values replacing any default values set by the system For example an optional parameter of an Ethernet interface is bofl retries This parameter normally has a default value of 5 5 retries but you can change this to another numeric value 117383 C Rev 00 Chapter 2 Getting Started with the BCC This chapter provides information about the following topics Topic Page Entering and Exiting the BCC Interface 2 1 Displaying Your Location in Configuration Mode 2 3 Navigating in Configuration Mode 2 3 Displaying Configuration Data 2 8 Displaying Help on System Commands 2 26 Entering and Exiting the BCC Interface To access the BCC interface on a Bay Networks router 1 Open a Technician Interface session with the target router For detailed information about opening a Technician Interface session see Using Technician Interface Software 2 Enter the Manager or User command at
94. rmat Transfer files to or from this device over a dial out of band connection 117383 C Rev 00 Appendix C TCL Support The BCC supports the following subset of Tool Command Language TCL scripting commands on the router platform append for irange e switch break foreach ireplace unset e case e gets e Isearch e uplevel e catch global e Isort e upvar e close e if open e while e concat e incr proc e continue e interp puts e eof e join rename e error e lappend e return e eval e lindex e set exit linsert e source e expr e list e split e flush Ilength e subst For more information about definitions syntax and applications for these TCL commands refer to the following book Ousterhout J Tcl and the Tk Toolkit Reading Mass Addison Wesley ISBN 0 201 63337 X 117383 C Rev 00 C 1 Appendix D System show Commands This appendix describes the following BCC system show commands Topic Page show access D 2 show console D 4 show hardware D 7 show interface D 9 show process D 10 show system D 13 Note For information about the show config command see Displaying Configuration Data on page 2 8 117383 C Rev 00 D 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC show access active The show access lt option gt command displays information about multiuser access The show access command supports the f
95. s TAT AI seien AEN enaA EAN a 1 3 Gawor ion COMER aripii EERE 1 5 Obec and STRINGS omaia a a a Ear EAE r EaR 1 6 BOC Instance TJENE onoir anasa aaas a oa iaeaea 1 7 Global Box Wide Objects T E ET EE AT E T 1 7 Physical Dance ODSCIS sariini ANA 1 8 Pae a a a a 1 10 ET MEE A E E E E 1 10 Dood seie ne ioeaeaadenaaapNeRNNE 1 10 Optional soreriissrsriis T pais eisai mei ie E ee ete eins 1 10 117383 C Rev 00 V Chapter 2 Getting Started with the BCC Entering and Exiting the BOC lite age emisioei eaen 2 1 Displaying Your Location in Configuration Mode cccccceceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeseneeeeeeeeees 2 3 Navigating in Configuration Mode ence T AN T ES A 2 3 Navigating with the back Command seinsnisrioienisnan aiaa 2 3 Navigating with Configuration Commands cceeceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeteeeteees 2 4 Moving Back One or More Levele sisisi iorsin ari 2 4 Moving Back to Root Level srscsiseninik idasiiinirAsdeaten 2 5 Moving Forward One or More Levels E AT E niece 2 5 Moving to Any Context in the Device Contioueatan ee 2 6 Displaying Coniguratan Dala sixcnsstonsannusivicniinlineiiaiee sian aikie noe ii 2 8 Displaying Current Active Configuration Data ccceeeseeeeeees EE EE ET 2 8 Displaying Gontigured OBJEC S csssssreseaspeciss n raaanierametisiinaantes 2 10 Displaying Configured Parameter Values c cccccceeceeesceeeseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeereenates 2 16 Display
96. s configured at every level on the current object Display the path from root level to each configured object Example Iso r Note You cannot combine the I and r arguments of the Iso command Displaying Configured Objects You can display e The current object the object shown in the BCC configuration prompt e An object you specify by BCC instance ID e Objects configured at the next subcontext level e All branches configured on the current object e The total device configuration tree active configuration only e The IDs of all configured objects e The active configuration in compact format 2 10 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC Displaying the Current Object To display the configuration of the current object minus any dependent objects configured on the same branch use the show config command Example ethernet 2 1 show config ethernet slot 2 connector 1 circuit name E21 alpha Displaying a Specified Object To display the configuration of any object you specify by BCC instance ID from any configuration context enter show config lt BCC_Instance_ID gt BCC_instance_ID is the identifier assigned by the BCC to uniquely identify a specific object in the active device configuration Example Show the configuration of an object with the ID ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 ethernet 2 1 show config ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 ip address 192 168 125 34 mask
97. the Iso recursive Iso r command from your current context Note that Iso r intially lists all objects configured at the next subcontext level and then displays the detailed path to each of those objects in standard BCC configuration syntax Example from root level BLN router box Iso r board 1 board 4 dns ip telnet board 2 board 5 ethernet 2 1 snmp tftp board 3 console 1 ftp syslog box board 1 box board 2 box snmp community public box snmp community public manager public 0 0 0 0 manager public 192 32 241 36 box snmp community public manager public 0 0 0 0 box snmp community public manager public 192 32 241 36 Example from an IP interface on ethernet 2 1 ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 Iso r arp 192 168 125 34 1 rip 192 168 125 34 box ethernet 2 1 ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 arp 192 168 125 34 1 box ethernet 2 1 ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 rip 192 168 125 34 2 14 117383 C Rev 00 Getting Started with the BCC Displaying Configured Objects in Compact Format To display in compact format the active configuration of the current object or any object you specify by BCC instance ID use the show config compact command Command output excludes any back commands otherwise shown for navigation from the current context to the prior context Example Display the configuration of your current context ethernet 2 1 in compact format ethernet 2 1 show c
98. try includes the name of the command the name of the user that issued the command and a timestamp You can disable this feature by setting the parameter state to disabled To configure audit navigate to the audit prompt for example stack access audit and enter values or accept the default values for the following parameters Table 4 4 Table 4 4 Audit Parameter Options Parameter Description Default Options state Administrative state of this object enabled enabled disabled audit level Privilege level activity to include in the audit log all all 117383 C Rev 00 Using the Bay Command Console BCC For example to disable the audit log enter stack access access audit audit state disabled audit A 6 117383 C Rev 00 Appendix B System Commands The BCC supports the system commands listed in Table B 1 For more detailed information about any command that works from the Technician Interface as well as the BCC prompt e Enter help lt command gt at any BCC prompt for example help save e Refer to the guide Using Technician Interface Software 117383 C Rev 00 B 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Table B 1 System Commands Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User List the names of objects parameters A A and system commands you can enter next lt command gt Display syntax usage Help f
99. two adapter modules and one expansion module Connector The BCC uses the term connector to identify the physical and electrical means to interconnect a network device slot or module directly or indirectly to a physical network transmission medium Line The BCC uses the term line to identify the physical and in some cases logical circuit identified typically by means of a slot connector interface type ethernet sync fddi and so on and where applicable a channel number such as with TI E1 interface types Port The BCC uses the term port to identify an interface object defined by its type for example an Ethernet port and location slot and connector within a network device On a network device a port is also a logical point of termination for data sent or received by a specific protocol or application 117383 C Rev 00 1 9 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Parameters Interface The BCC uses the term interface to identify circuitry and digital logic associated with the interconnection between a physical network medium such as Ethernet and a higher layer protocol entity such as IP Note A logical interface is an addressable entity for originating and terminating connections across an IP network A parameter is an attribute or property of a configurable object Parameters can be classified as one of the following e Required e Derived e Optional Required For any BCC object required pa
100. u Begin This guide is intended for users who have some experience supporting a multivendor internetworking system You should be able to perform network device configuration maintenance and troubleshooting Because the BCC makes real time changes to device configuration Bay Networks recommends that you first learn about BCC behavior on a device not connected to your production network Make sure that you are running the latest version of Bay Networks BayRS See the release and upgrading publications for information on how to upgrade to the latest version 117383 C Rev 00 xiii Using the Bay Command Console BCC Text Conventions This guide uses the following text conventions angle brackets lt gt Indicate that you choose the text to enter based on the description inside the brackets Do not type the brackets when entering the command Example If the command syntax is ping lt p_address gt you enter ping 192 32 10 12 bold text Indicates command names and options and text that you need to enter Example Enter show ip alerts routes Example Use the dinfo command braces Indicate required elements in syntax descriptions where there is more than one option You must choose only one of the options Unless explicitly instructed to do so do not type the braces when entering the command Example If the command syntax is show ip alerts routes you must enter either show ip alerts or show
101. uration choices you can make These are not objects already configured e The show config all command displays the hierarchy of objects you have actually configured Figure 1 2 illustrates a sample BCC configuration for an AN BN or ARN router 117383 C Rev 00 1 3 Using the Bay Command Console BCC b root gt ospf ets gt protocol gt gt ip protocol gt foratncal t gt rip gt gt protocol snmp gt protocol 7 gt gt telnet protocol gt gt tftp BOX WIDE GLOBAL OBJECTS protocol Services supported on all slots INTERFACE SPECIFIC OBJECTS Services supported on a specific slot ospf 1 2 3 4 gt protocol ethernet 2 1 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 P interface A protocol p arp 1 2 3 4 1 ethernet 2 2 protocol P interface serial 3 1 gt interface BCC0012C Figure 1 2 Sample BCC Configuration 1 4 117383 C Rev 00 Overview of the BCC You use BCC commands to create new objects and to modify or delete objects in an existing configuration hierarchy You begin at root level in BCC configuration mode and navigate to objects in the device configuration tree For example on a BLN router you can use BCC commands to add a new physical interface such as Ethernet on box add IP to the Ethernet interface
102. utually exclusive If you make a change during a BCC session in read write mode this change does not appear in other BCC sessions Multi User Access Previous versions of the BCC allowed only two login levels Manager and User With multi user access multiple users each with a distinct user name and password can access the router simultaneously 117383 C Rev 00 Overview of the BCC Multi user access allows you to e Add multiple user names passwords and access privileges to the router e Manage the distribution of user names passwords and access privileges from the BCC e View event logs showing each BCC command issued and the user responsible for issuing the command For more information on how to configure and use Multi User Access features refer to Appendix A Multi User Access Terminology and Concepts This section describes key terms and concepts of the BCC interface Configuration Hierarchy The BCC configuration hierarchy begins at a root level object called box for AN ANH ARN and BN platforms and stack for ASN and System 5000 platforms Under the root level object are branch objects such as interfaces and protocols that fan out from root level in a tree hierarchy You use the help tree all and show config all commands to display the configuration hierarchy of a Bay Networks router e The help tree all command displays the hierarchy of every object you can configure These are the config
103. values must appear as a pair in the same command line e Syntax for specifying the object you want to configure may vary according to the Bay Networks device to which you are connected Appendix E Syntax for Module Location lists the BCC syntax for specifying the physical location of a module in each Bay Networks device e If you enter the name of an object without values for its required parameters or with values inappropriate for its required parameters the BCC returns usage Help as shown in the following example box ethernet Required parameter slot was not specified for ethernet Usage ethernet slot lt value gt connector lt value gt Om ethernet lt slot gt lt connector gt Using Basic Full Syntax The basic or full syntax for BCC commands consists of the following required and optional elements lt object name gt lt required_parameter gt lt value gt lt parameter gt lt value gt lt parameter gt lt value gt The BCC requires input for any elements enclosed by braces object name is the name of an object you want to configure for example ip The BCC assumes that an object you specify is new and will create it if it is not in the current configuration If an object you specify already exists in the current configuration the BCC assumes that you want to modify that object 3 6 117383 C Rev 00 Entering Commands and Using Command Files required_param
104. values of data objects in the f VY lt attr_name gt lt attr_id gt lt inst_id gt MIB BCC only mlist instances lt obj_name gt List objects in the MIB Y va BCC only more on off lt _lines_per_screen gt Set or display the status of the more A A utility continued 117383 C Rev 00 B 7 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Table B 1 System Commands continued Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User mset lt obj_name gt lt obj_id gt lt attr_name gt Modify set the values of data objects in W lt attr_id gt lt inst_id gt lt value gt the device MIB BCC only partition create delete lt vo gt Create or delete a partition on existing VY VY file system media password Manager Change the password of the Manager A account password User Change the password of the User va va account ping lt protocol gt lt address gt Initiate an ECHO request reply A A t lt timeout gt handshake pktdump lt ine_number gt s lt start gt Display packets that have been captured c lt count gt by an interface configured for Packet Capture prom v w Update or verify the software located on f lt vol gt lt ROM_Update_File gt lt slot_ID gt a flash PROM device lt slot_ID gt pwc Display the path to your current working I A BCC configuration mode only location in the tree starti
105. wledge that such portions of the software were developed by the University of California Berkeley The name of the University may not be used to endorse or promote products derived from such portions of the software without specific prior written permission SUCH PORTIONS OF THE SOFTWARE ARE PROVIDED AS IS AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE In addition the program and information contained herein are licensed only pursuant to a license agreement that contains restrictions on use and disclosure that may incorporate by reference certain limitations and notices imposed by third parties 117383 C Rev 00 Bay Networks Inc Software License Agreement NOTICE Please carefully read this license agreement before copying or using the accompanying software or installing the hardware unit with pre enabled software each of which is referred to as Software in this Agreement BY COPYING OR USING THE SOFTWARE YOU ACCEPT ALL OF THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT THE TERMS EXPRESSED IN THIS AGREEMENT ARE THE ONLY TERMS UNDER WHICH BAY NETWORKS WILL PERMIT YOU TO USE THE SOFTWARE If you do not accept these terms and conditions return the product unused and in the original shipping container within 30 days of purchase to obtain a credit for the full purchase price 1 License Grant Bay Networks Inc
106. y loadmap lt s ot_list gt all lt filepath gt Display the load address and size of VY each dynamically loadable application for example a protocol continued 117383 C Rev 00 System Commands Table B 1 System Commands continued Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User log lt vol gt lt logfile gt d lt date gt t lt time gt Display the current system event log A V e lt entity gt f lt severity gt s lt slot_ID gt p lt rate gt c lt code gt Follow the optional e flag immediately with the entity name in uppercase characters and enclosed in quotation marks no intervening spaces Specify lt severity gt using letters with no intervening spaces f fault w warning i info t trace d debug Examples fwid ffitd fwi fwitd Use the optional p flag to set an interval for polling the log and displaying the result log x i e lt entity gt f lt severity gt Excludes x or includes i event VY VY s lt slot_ID gt logging indicated by the command options log z s lt s ot_ID gt Displays current filter setting VY VY logout Exit the current login session Vv Vv Iso I List objects configured on the current V Y object The optional I flag causes the BCC configuration mode only BCC to list object IDs in wraparound screen format mget lt obj_name gt lt obj_id gt Retrieve the
107. y like ports 1 2 and 3 Port 4 doesn t support a printer Port 4 is called PRINTER only because that label is printed near the port connector on the link module Slot Number Slot on which the login session for the serial port is running Baud Rate Current baud rate setting for the serial port Data Bits Number of data bits in the serial port s configuration D 4 117383 C Rev 00 Parity Stop Bits Modem Enable Lines Screen More Enable Port Prompt Login Retries Login Timeout min Password Time Out Command Time Out User Abort Logout Initial Search Path System show Commands Serial port s current parity setting Number of stop bits in the serial port s configuration Configuration of modem control as follows e Disabled Port is directly connected to a device such as a dummy terminal or a terminal server Enabled Port is attached to a modem and modem leads are enabled Number of lines that the serial port displays before displaying the more prompt Setting of the Technician Interface more feature Enabled or Disabled according to the MIB record The Technician Interface more command affects only the current login session it does not change the MIB and so does not affect the setting of this field Technician Interface prompt Maximum number of login retries relevant only if modem control is enabled This value determines the maximum number of failed login attempts that a system al
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