Home

Avaya Bay Command Console User's Manual

image

Contents

1. x 117383 B Rev 00 How to Get Help About This Guide If you purchased a service contract for your Bay Networks product from a distributor or authorized reseller contact the technical support staff for that distributor or reseller for assistance If you purchased a Bay Networks service program call one of the following Bay Networks Technical Solutions Centers Technical Solutions Center Telephone number Fax number Billerica MA 800 2LANWAN 978 916 3514 Santa Clara CA 800 2LANWAN 408 495 1188 Valbonne France 33 4 92 96 69 68 33 4 92 96 69 98 Sydney Australia 61 2 9927 8800 61 2 9927 881 1 Tokyo Japan 81 3 5402 0180 81 3 5402 0173 117383 B Rev 00 xi Chapter 1 Overview of the BCC Interface 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 Technician Interface Login gt Access the BCC BCCO0001B Figure 1 1 The Technician Interface and the BCC Interface 117383 B Rev 00 1 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC From the bcc gt prompt you can e Run any system command not classified as Technician Interface only See Appendix A System Commands e Use configuration mode to perform tasks such as creating or deleting IP interfaces on
2. cpu detail total memory buffers detail total Displays the number and percentage of buffers used by all processes on the router show process buffers detail total The table includes the following information Name Name of process detail only Slot Slot number Used Number of buffers used Used Percentage of buffers used Max Maximum buffers total only 117383 B Rev 00 C 7 Using the Bay Command Console BCC cpu detail total detail total Displays the use in 100ths of seconds and percentage of cpu used by all processes on the router By specifying the options that appear in the following command line you can customize the output to display cpu usage for a particular process or slot on the router show process cpu detail total Displays details about cpu usage by all processes Displays only cpu statistic totals Note For information on how to obtain a list of available processes refer to the show process list command later in this section memory The table includes the following information Name The name of the Slot Slot number Used 100ths of seconds used by each process Used Percentage of cpu time used by each process Displays the number and percentage of memory used by all processes on the router The output can be tailored to only display memory usage for a particular process or a particular slot by using the options described below show pro
3. To enter and exit the BCC 1 Access the Technician Interface on the router by entering the Manager or User command at the Login prompt that appears on your Telnet or console display After you start the BCC interface the Manager login allows you to enter any system command A Manager login also allows by default 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 With read only access you can display or navigate the existing configuration but you cannot modify the configuration Start the BCC interface by entering bcc at the Technician Interface prompt Routerl gt bee 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 wr
4. 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 rip is 3 Verify that you reenabled RIP rip 1 2 3 4 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 Example ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 enable rip 1 2 3 4 ipy 12 3 64 25 5 0 0 5 OF Using this method you remain in the current context after enabling the branch object 117383 B Rev 00 4 17 Using the Bay Command Console BCC 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 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 aip 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 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 lso 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 lso no objects listed Note that ip 192 168 133
5. 4 10 117383 B Rev 00 Configuring a Network Device 16 Check to see what you can configure next at this level snmp Sub Contexts community trap entity trap event Parameters in Current Context authentication traps lock timeout state has name type of service lock on lock address scope delimiter System Commands You can modify values currently assigned to attributes of SNMP and you can add a community define a trap entity or define a trap event 17 View the parameter definitions available using the BCC help parameters 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 B 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 modify the value of the access attribute to read write community public access read write community public 21 Define an SNMP manager for the router
6. 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 n on the ARN expansion module Example ethernet 1 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 1 3 This is a serial WAN interface configured on WAN connector 3 which exists physically on the ARN expansion module 117383 B Rev 00 1 7 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Platform Interface Port Numbering BN lt interface gt lt slot gt lt connector gt lt interface gt Interface type ethernet token ring serial etc e lt slot gt number 2 to 5 BLN or 1 to 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 System 5000 lt interface gt lt slot gt lt module gt lt connector gt lt interface gt Interface type ethernet token ring serial atm
7. Using the Bay Command Console BCC BayRS Version 12 20 Site Manager Software Version 6 20 BCC 4 00 Part No 117383 B Rev 00 June 1998 GIS Bay Networks a Bay Networks 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 June 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 AN BCN BLN BN FRE and Bay Networks are registered trademarks and Advanced Remote Node ANH ARN ASN BayRS BCC System 5000 and the Bay Networks logo are trademarks of Bay Networks Inc 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 ii of the R
8. etc lt slot_number gt 2 to 13 in a System 5000 chassis lt module gt numbering corresponds to Net Modules 1 or 2 which plug into a System 5000 base module Any System 5000 base module is always module 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 Module A board in a Bay Networks router The board provides one of the following functions base module net module adapter module or expansion module Connector The physical and electrical or optical means to interconnect a network device directly or indirectly to a physical layer transmission medium Line A 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 An interface object defined by its type for example an Ethernet port and location slot and connector within a network
9. 2 8 117383 B Rev 00 box eth 2 1 Starting context Figure 2 3 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Moving Forward from Root box Level To move from your current working level to the next configured level Figure 2 3 enter the BCC instance ID of the desired object as follows Example BN router 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 box gt ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 1 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 bS ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip Ly rip 1 2 3 4 Ending context rip 1 2 3 4 BCCO0014B Moving Away from Root box Level Specifying a Full Path You can specify a full or absolute path from root box or stack level to any configured object When you enter a path specify the BCC instance identifier of each object 117383 B Rev 00 2 9 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Example BN router 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 4 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 BCC0009C Figure 2 4 Specifying a Full Path Specifying a Shortened Path The BCC can automatically search backward recursively toward root level until it finds a level where the object you speci
10. Router1 gt 2 Start the BCC by entering bcc at the Technician Interface prompt Routerl gt bee 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 B Rev 00 4 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC 4 Check the hardware configuration of the router box show config box type frecn BCN router with a FRE 2 controller board slot 5 type sync Serial link module in 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 qenf 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 them automatically using the BCC source command See Entering Commands from a File in Chapter 3 For information on how to determine module types based on the assigned value of the board type parameter refer to the section Identifying Board Types in the BCC section o
11. Technician Interface only Display data from IPv6 show a different view for each subcommand or flag you enter list lt instances gt lt obj_name gt Technician Interface only List objects in the MIB loadmap lt s ot_list gt all lt filepath gt Display the load address and size of each dynamically loadable application for example a protocol continued 117383 B Rev 00 System Commands Table A 1 System Commands continued Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User log lt vol gt lt ogfile 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 quotes and uppercase characters no intervening spaces Specify lt severity gt using letters and 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 L
12. commands TCL Tool Command Language scripting commands supported by the Bay Command Console Terse Help In any mode lt command gt lt command gt lt option gt In BCC configuration mode lt object gt Example from an ethernet context ip lt BCC_instance_ID gt Example from an ethernet context ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 lt parameter gt Example address resolution lt BCC_instance_ID gt lt parameter gt Example from an ethernet context ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 address resolution Commands 117383 B Rev 00 2 15 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Example Get a more detailed alphabetized list of BCC commands with syntax and terse definitions box help commands more SCROLL TO THE COMMAND YOU NEED Note This list does not include The names of objects or parameters you can enter as configuration commands TCL Tool Command Language scripting commands supported by the Bay Command Console Terse Help In any mode List the names of commands in any mode parameters of the current object configuration mode only and objects configurable from your current working location configuration mode only lt command gt lt command gt lt option gt Display in any mode usage help keyword options or lt xyz gt filters for this command In BCC configuration mode lt object gt List parameters of this branch object which you can
13. 1 3 deleting 4 18 disabling 4 16 enabing 4 17 online Help BCC 2 12 A 5 optional attributes 1 4 P parameters abbreviating 1 9 defined 1 3 derived values 1 3 getting Help 2 13 help definitions for A 5 required and optional 3 10 specifying multiple 3 11 specifying values for 3 10 path specifying 2 9 2 10 port defined 1 8 PROM information hardware C 6 prompt context sensitive 2 6 protocol defined 1 9 protocols show system command C 11 publications ordering x pwc command 2 6 R reading commands from a file 3 3 recalling commands 3 2 required attributes defined 1 3 3 8 S saving configuration commands 2 27 serial port configuration C 2 error statistics C 4 117383 B Rev 00 show commands console C 2 hardware C 5 system C 10 show config command 2 23 example 2 25 slot defined 1 6 slots hardware C 6 source command defined 3 3 4 15 syntax 3 4 specifying a path 2 9 2 10 statistics console C 4 syntax getting Help on 2 12 types 3 1 system information C 11 SYSTEM subcommands C 10 T tasks show system command C 12 TCL support B 1 Technical Solutions Centers xi Technician Interface 1 1 1 2 Technician Interface environment C 2 U User privileges 2 2 Index 3
14. 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 You can also delete an object from its parent context using the following syntax 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 B Rev 00 Configuring a Network Device Configuration Command Responses The BCC completes the configuration task you entered unless a syntax semantics or completion error occurs You can display and verify the configuration by entering the show config command In certain circumstances the BCC may be unable to complete a configuration command this is a completion error When this occurs the BCC displays an appropriate error message 117383 B Rev 00 4 19 Appendix A System Commands AN ANH ARN ASN BCN BLN and System 5000 routers support all system commands shown in Table A 1 Note that some commands perform functions specific to your current interface level Technician Interface BCC or BCC configuration mode and login privilege level Manager or User Table A 1 System Commands Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Man
15. 2 1 The BCC completes or expands abbreviated object and parameter names when you press Return 117383 B Rev 00 3 9 Using the Bay Command Console BCC 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 BN router box e ambiguous command name e enable eof error ethernet eval exit expr Note that the BCC returns a list of all the commands available in the current context and that also 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 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 command line For example the following command changes the BOFL timeout interval from 5 seconds to 4 seconds on ethernet 1 1 of a BN router box ethernet 1 1 bofl timeout 4 ethernet is the object type and 1 1 represents the specific slot and connector location for this Ethernet port bofl timeout is the Ethernet interface parameter you want to modify and 4 is the new value for the bofl timeout parameter bofl timeout 4 is the parameter value pair Required Derived and Other Parameters The BCC ind
16. 3 4 conventions Vili creating a new configuration 4 1 customer support programs x Technical Solutions Centers xi D delete command operator 3 12 4 18 derived parameters 1 3 Diagnostics PROM revision date C 6 disable command operator 3 12 4 16 E editing commands 3 13 enable command operator 3 12 4 17 entering the BCC 2 1 error messages 4 19 exiting the BCC 2 1 G global objects defined 1 6 H hardware information C 5 hardware subcommands C 5 has parameter example 2 25 Help commands 2 12 A 5 overview 2 12 history buffer 3 2 Index 2 image software C 5 info command 3 12 information show system command C 11 instance identifier 1 4 2 6 2 9 3 11 interface defined 1 9 L line defined 1 8 list command operators A 1 command symbols or conventions A 5 configurable objects A 5 configured objects A 7 editing commands 3 13 parameter definitions 2 13 statistical information A 9 system commands A 1 location in configuration hierarchy 2 6 login privileges and procedures 2 2 lso command 2 23 2 25 Manager User privilege levels 2 2 memory hardware C 6 show system command C 11 messages error 4 19 methods 3 12 modifying a configuration with file based commands 4 15 N navigating back one or more levels 2 8 forward one level 2 9 using configuration commands 2 7 using the back command 2 7 117383 B Rev 00 O objects defined
17. Discovery IGMP or ARP 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 B Rev 00 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 to see what global services protocols and interfaces you can configure at this level box Sub Contexts atm fddi ipx serial virtual backup pool ftp isdn switch snmp board hssi mcel telnet console http mctl tftp ethernet ip ntp token ring Parameters in Current Context build date description location system name build version has mib counters type contact help file name on uptime System Commands You can add any of the following global services affecting all slots IP IPX FTP NTP SNMP Telnet and TFTP You can add any of the following interfaces ATM Ethernet FDDI HSSI Serial Token ring or Virtual You can view the configuration of a board in any slot but you cannot modify the parameters of any board object 14 List the objects already configured at box level box lso board 1l 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
18. Object Location OF Context sssssicsriensionrentoramin ana 2 5 Figure 2 3 Moving Away from Root box Level Riaki Ore T Aoa 2 9 Figure 24 Speciyinga Pull PAI cissiccticrtastiesrceeteccnnartitreanipadeladnted 2 10 Figure 2 5 Navigating with the BCC Backward Recursive Search Feature 2 11 Figure 2 6 Objects to Configure at the Next Branch Level n se 2 21 Figure 4 1 Sample BCC Configuration BCN Router cccccesseeeeeeeeeesteeeeeeeeeees 4 3 Figure 4 2 Typical BCC Configuration Cycle c cecceecseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeteeetnes 4 4 117383 B Rev 00 xvii Tables Table 3 1 BOG Command SSP Ors irnia a N 3 12 Table 3 2 Keystrokes for Editing BCC Command Lines ccceeseeeeteeeeeeteeees 3 13 Table A 1 Roa USE CPIM AU soin sNenduce tacetoneppciedanepaiadamepelesanees A 1 117383 B Rev 00 xix About This Guide If you are responsible for configuring and managing Bay Networks AN ANH ARN ASN BN BCN and BLN and System 5000 routers read this guide to learn how to use the Bay Command Console BCC If you want to Go to Learn about BCC concepts and terminology h r1 Learn how to perform basic BCC operations Chapter 2 Learn how to enter BCC commands Chapter 3 Learn how to use the BCC to configure a router running BayRS h r4 software To use the BCC you should have some experience supporting a multivendor internetworking system Yo
19. 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 ji 117383 B Rev 00 USA Requirements Only Note This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC rules These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment This equipment generates uses and can radiate radio frequency energy If it is not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual it may cause harmful interference to radio communications Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference in which case users will be required to take whatever measures may be necessary to correct the interference at their own expense European Requirements Only EN 55 022 Statement This is to certify that the Bay Networks lt product or system name gt is shielded against the generation of radio interference in accordance with the application of Council Directive 89 336 EEC Article 4a Conformity is declar
20. 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 117383 B Rev 00 iii 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 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
21. a E xi Chapter 1 Overview of the BCC Interface Parme R EE naO 1 2 GIDE o BOC SOSTRE raaa A A A 1 2 Soete aD e E e ATAA E E E A E E E O E E E TA 1 3 Terminology and THOS sairis oioi enea e ano nni E i 1 3 Using Abbrovialions and ACrONyMS snnsisriin i 1 9 Chapter 2 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Entering and Exiting the BOG Interface ssrsisiiriis irissat rionn NAE ANA 2 1 Using the BCC Configurations HIGKAIGNY na isimisu incinn iaa 2 3 Locating Configured CIN arrsa rrannnirra aar iria i 2 5 ES fala Wes COOKE araia AEEA NE 2 6 Context Sensitive Prompts sssosseeeseeesseeeeeeeee EE E E E E E A 2 6 Navigating in Configuration Mode siisii eaa 2 7 Navigating with the back Command isc siicaseeceurrssrisdeaiurdaermssedeuednitdbue isin sdauunsnes 2 7 Navigating with Configuration Commands T eer beck easing T E 2 8 Moving Back One or Mare Levels ssrasiensaisssninans aaa 2 8 Moving Back io Root Lavel sirsenis i 2 8 Moving F rward from Root OOK Level ssssisscrsrcseirisrcscireericcurnnrnssnnsis 2 9 SeLeN ae a E E A E E A E 2 9 Specifying a Shortened Path A err Arti T aboa eena 2 10 117383 B Rev 00 xiii Displaying Online Help saicsiiniiienseciennineneniinkien Aenean 2 12 Using the BCC Help File TAT chains errr darana T a ae 2 22 Displaying Help File Version Dala sscecacseciercccteanstvcnsdessveteventns aai 2 23 Displaying Coniguration Dala sive tiiinnnuiis namiiatiituanaiinaiunamaiutien a
22. 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 extended usage Help on how to configure an SNMP manager 22 Try again to add the manager this time supplying a value for its required attribute parameter address You must enter a value but not the name for a required 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 tfitp The BCC automatically searches back toward root to find the parent context suitable for TFTP in this case box The BCC then adds TFTP to the device configuration Note the new t ftp prompt 4 12 117383 B Rev 00 Configuring a Network Device 25 Check values currently assigned to attributes of TF TP 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 b
23. configure from your current location Example from an ethernet context ip lt BCC_instance_ID gt Commands 2 16 117383 B Rev 00 Example Learning to Use the BCC Interface Define the purpose of each parameter of ethernet 2 1 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 ries pecifies eout pecifies divisor pecifies name pecifies r ne ne ne ne Allows breath of life polls to be disabled BOFL Retry Count number of seconds for the BOFL timer BOFL TMO divisor circuit Name of this port REQUIRED Specifies a connector on this interface bofl bofl ret S bofl tim S bofl tmo 5 CLreule S connecto hardware filter Enables the hardware bridge filter if available receive queue length Specifies the number of receive buffers dedicated to the chip slot REQUIRED Specifies the slot associated with this interface state Indicates the administrative state of this object enabled or disabled transmit queue length Specifies the number of transmit buffers dedicated to the chip 117383 B Rev 00 2 17 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Example BN router Show all objects you can configure on this device box help tree all The entire configuration tree is board virtual ip ospf neighbor ftp
24. gt lt connector gt With values ethernet 2 1 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 BN router example 3 8 117383 B Rev 00 Entering Commands box ethernet Required parameter slot was not specified for ethernet Usage ethernet slot lt value gt connector lt value gt Or ethernet lt slot gt lt connector gt The following commands are equivalent Using full syntax box ethernet slot 2 connector 1 ethernet 2 1 Using default minimum syntax box ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 1 ethernet is the object you want to configure slot and connector are the required parameters of ethernet on AN ANH ARN and BN platforms The ability to configure objects using only the values for required parameters is the minimum to configure feature of the BCC Typically the BCC requires you to enter the values but not the names of required parameters In some cases however the BCC requires you to explicitly enter the name of a required parameter along with its value The usage Help indicates the command elements you need to enter Using Abbreviated Syntax You can abbreviate BCC configuration commands as follows Example BN router box eth 2 1 This is the same as either of the following two commands box ethernet slot 2 connector 1 box ethernet
25. http ntp peer snmp community manager trap entity trap event tftp console telnet client server atm atm interface signaling timers signaling vc ilmi ilmi ve sscop pvc service pvc ip arp rip ospf neighbor rdisc igmp relay ipx rip sap static route adjacent host static service 2 18 117383 B Rev 00 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Example BN router List objects you can configure starting at the ethernet 2 1 branch of the device configuration ethernet 2 1 help tree The configuration tree below this context is ip arp rip ospf neighbor rdise igmp relay ipx rip sap static route adjacent host static service route filter server network filter server name filter auto neg Note The main difference between the help tree and show config commands is that help tree shows what you can configure show config shows you what has been configured For more information about the show config command see Displaying the Configuration of One Object on page page 2 25 You can also use the output of the help tree all command to find the configuration or navigation path to a specific object 117383 B Rev 00 2 19 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Example List the names of all objects parameters and system commands you can enter from the context of ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 0 ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 Sub Contexts arp igmp ospf rdisc rip
26. modules and 1 expansion module 117383 B Rev 00 Overview of the BCC Interface Platform Interface Port Numbering 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 number always 1 AN ANH is a 1 slot device lt connector gt numbering starts with connector 1 Example ethernet slot 1 connector 2 This is an Ethernet interface configured on AN ANH connector 2 which exists on an Ethernet adapter module Connectors 1 and 2 are on the base ASN lt interface gt lt slot gt lt module gt lt connector gt lt interface gt Interface type ethernet token ring serial etc lt slot_number gt 1 2 3 or 4 depending on the manual setting of the Module ID switch on each ASN box The switch indicates the position of specific ASN chassis in a stackable ASN configuration lt module gt numbering corresponds to Net Module numbering 1 to 4 on each ASN box 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 box 2 of a stacked ASN configuration 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 number always 1 lt connector gt numbering depends on the port type LAN or WAN
27. on a BN platform are slot and connector e The required parameters of a physical port on an ASN platform are slot module and connector Derived parameters Parameters for which the BCC supplies a value For example a derived parameter of OSPF global 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 117383 B Rev 00 1 3 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Optional parameters The set of parameters for which you can optionally 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 system default value of 5 5 retries but you can change this to another numeric value BCC instance identifier Uniquely identifies a single instance of an object configured on a Bay Networks device The BCC instance ID consists typically of the name of an object combined with the values you specify for its required parameters For example e The BCC instance ID for an Ethernet interface on a BN platform consists of ethernet lt slot gt lt connector gt as in ethernet 2 1 e The BCC instance ID for an Ethernet interface on an ASN platform consists of ethernet lt s ot gt lt module gt lt connector gt as in ethernet 1 2 1 For some objects the BCC automatically appends an internally generated number to ensure uniqueness of th
28. 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 indicates a possible problem with the line 117383 B Rev 00 System Oriented Show Commands show hardware The show hardware lt option gt commands display information about a router s hardware The show hardware command supports the following subcommand options backplane memory 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 name and volume that was the source of the configuration as well as the slot that delivered the configuration file to the reset slot All slots should be running the same configuration file originating from the same volume or backup volume 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 filename that contains the image If the filename is too long to fit in a horizontal table the script displays the information in a vertical table similar to the one shown for the config_file command 117383 B Rev 00
29. physical port connection as follows 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 While port 4 is called PRINTER it is exactly like ports 1 2 and 3 Port 4 doesn t support a printer It has that name because that s what is printed near the port connector on the link module 117383 B Rev 00 Slot Number Baud Rate Data Bits Parity Stop Bits Modem Control Lines Screen More Enable Port Prompt Login Retries Login Timeout min Password Time Out Command Time Out User Abort Logout Initial Search Path System Oriented Show Commands Slot on which the login session for the serial port is running Current baud rate setting for the serial port Number of data bits in the serial port s configuration 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 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 I
30. proxy off host cache aging cache off udp checksum on end station support off redirects on cache size 128 To get the current value assigned to a specific parameter enter just the parameter name as follows ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 gt proxy proxy off 117383 B Rev 00 2 21 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Using the BCC Help File To use any BCC command that begins with the verb help for example help commands or help tree the BCC Help file called bec help by default must be present on the NVFS default volume If the file is missing or if you have not configured the box to find the Help file the BCC displays the following message The help data file is missing Please transfer bcc help to the default volume You can obtain a copy of bcc help from Compact Disk CD for this software release Released version of the file http support baynetworks com library tpubs bcc Latest version of the file For more information on BCC help refer to your Using the Bay Command Console user guide If you see this message first check to see if the Help file already exists on the default volume If the file is missing obtain a copy of it and use FTP or TFTP to transfer the file to the default volume of the device After verifying that the file exists on the default volume enter BCC configuration mode and enter the following command to specify the name and location of the Help file help file name
31. the most up to date information about services you can configure using the BCC on any AN ANH ARN ASN BCN BLN or System 5000 platform 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 Terminology and Concepts The following list of terms and concepts defines key functional and user oriented aspects of the BCC interface Object A data structure representing 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 Class 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 Each instance is an object uniquely identifiable within the total device configuration Parameters Attributes or properties of a configurable object For example some parameters of Ethernet on a BN platform are e slot and connector describing the location of the Ethernet interface e bofl retries describing one behavioral aspect of the Ethernet interface Required parameters A minimum set of parameters for which the BCC requires you to supply values in order to configure the object For example e The parameters you must specify to configure any physical port ethernet serial etc
32. 26 for instructions Saving show config Output to an ASCII file on the Router You can save the output of the show config command directly to a plain ASCII text file on the router as follows To save the commands displayed by show config from any location in the device configuration tree show config all file lt volume gt lt filename gt To save only those commands displayed by show config context sensitive from your current location in the device configuration tree show config file lt volume gt lt filename gt Saving the Active Configuration as a Bootable Binary 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 a NVFS volume The following command saves config as a bootable binary file on a volume you specify bcc gt save config lt volume gt lt filename gt 2 26 117383 B Rev 00 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Saving Commands on a Workstation If you log in to a Bay Networks router from a workstation using Telnet or terminal emulation you can use the native capabilities of the workstation to e Save the output of any show config command from the screen to an ASCII file e Save a sequence of manually entered BCC commands to an ASCII file You can also use an ASCII text editor on a workstation to create a file from which th
33. 34 back 2 ethernet 2 1 117383 B Rev 00 2 7 Using the Bay Command Console BCC In this example the back 2 command moves you from a current working location of 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 Moving Back One or More Levels To move from your current working level back one or more levels closer to root box level of the device configuration tree enter the full BCC instance ID of the desired object as follows Example go back one level vip 192 168 125 34 ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 Example go back two levels vip 192 168 155 151 ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 1 In the second example the BCC searches back toward root automatically 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 command line 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 as follows ip 1 2 3 4 box AN ANH ARN BN router box ip 1 2 3 4 stack ASN or System 5000 router stack
34. 8 125 34 255 255 255 224 ip 192 168 125 34 255 255 255 224 rip rip 192 168 125 34 Note The prompt contains the BCC instance identifier of the object you specified in the previous command line 2 6 117383 B Rev 00 Learning to Use the BCC Interface The prompt does not show the full path to the current object from root level The prompt shows only the object that terminates the entire path from root box level To obtain the full path use the pwe command Navigating in Configuration Mode Using BCC configuration commands you can e Move back to a previous context or level e Move back to root box level e Move forward to the next level e Move from your current level to any other level in the device configuration tree 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 specific number of levels back toward root level Syntax for the back command is as follows back lt n gt Entering the back command with no argument moves you back one level closer to root level Example BN router 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 BN Router rip 192 168 125
35. BCC to the Technician Interface and log out of the device 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 For example 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 Assumptions for this example are that you first complete the physical installation of the router then boot the router using the image bn exe and the minimum configuration 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 RIPon IP interface 192 168 133 114 4 2 117383 B Rev 00 Configuring a Network Device e Serial interface in slot 5 e Dual Token Ring interface in slot 9 e FDDI interface in slot 11 e SRML system controller in slot 7 snmp community public serial 5 1 fddi 11 1 N D D Cc Z j oO I lt e ethernet 13 1 ethernet 13 2 ae oD pulled S g
36. C 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC memory proms slots Displays memory configuration and capacity information about all slots or a specific slot The table 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 in megabytes of local and global memory Displays PROM information for all slots The table includes the revision and build date of the Bootstrap PROM and the Diagnostics PROM 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 type of the network module type revision and serial number C 6 117383 B Rev 00 System Oriented Show Commands show process The show process lt option gt commands display information about the use of resources buffers cpu memory lists etc on the router The show process command supports the following subcommand options buffers detail total
37. Command Co Example Get a terse o bec gt help nsole BCC verview of BCC Help features Help Summary System Help 92 lt command gt Example show lt command gt lt option gt F help Example show ip Displays a summary of help oriented commands help help Disp help Disp Disp help Disp help Disp show Disp show lt any_command gt Examples help pwc help show commands lays a terse list of BCC system administrative commands commands more lays more detail on BCC system administrative commands editing lays commands for editing command lines tree lays the hierarchy of all objects configurable from your current location tree all lays from any location the hierarchy of all objects configurable on this device config lays the hierarchy of all objects already configured on config all Disp help help lays the complete hierarchy of the actual existing device configuration syntax Defines symbols used to express BCC command syntax learning bcc 2 14 117383 B Rev 00 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Example Get an alphabetical list of BCC system commands syntax only with some examples where needed bcc gt help commands SCROLL TO THE COMMAND YOU NEED Note This list does not include The names of objects or parameters you can enter as configuration
38. H is set to this string The string format is as follows lt vol gt lt vol gt Example 2 3 4 5 117383 B Rev 00 Manager s AutoScript User s AutoScript Using the Bay Command Console BCC Name of the script to run when the Manager 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 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 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 the User login account has made on the console port Number of failed login attempts the Manager login account has made on the console port Number of failed login attempts made by login accounts other than User and Manager on the console port Number of frame errors on the console port Number of overrun errors
39. Parameters in Current Context address address resolution all subnet broadcast assocaddr broadcast cache size configured mac address System Commands back bcecSource bconfig boot ca clear clearlog commit compact config cp cwc date debug delete diags dinfo dir disable cost end station support has host cache aging mask mask reply mtu discovery display enable exit format getcfg help help file version history ifconfig info loadmap log logout lso mget mlist more mset partition password on proxy redirects state udp checksum ping pktdump pop prom pwc readexe record reset restart rm save securelogin show stamp stop system tic type unmount xmodem The list of configurable objects Sub Contexts are those you can add from your current location in the device configuration tree Figure 2 6 117383 B Rev 00 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Configuration Sequence v ARP Created automatically IGMP RDISC with IP BCC0019A Figure 2 6 Objects to Configure at the Next Branch Level Example BN router Get the values currently assigned to all parameters of IP address 1 2 3 4 on ethernet 2 1 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 info on ethernet 2 1 state enabled address 1 2 3 4 mask 255 0 0 0 assocaddr 0 0 0 0 cost 1 broadcast 1 2 3 6 configured mac address 0x mtu discovery off mask reply off all subnet broadcast off address resolution arp
40. Value Pairs ccceeeeeeeeees eee a311 SOM INIA OPaOS ssr miadeiniieannani meet nieanin as 3 11 Edino Contend LOES aia sis stad sncs athideuns a E 3 13 xiv 117383 B Rev 00 Chapter 4 Configuring a Network Device Creating and Modifying a Device Configuration 0 00 eceeseeesseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeceeenereeeteanee 4 1 Entering Configuration Commands from a File ccecceceseseeeeeneeececeeeeeeaeeseeeeeeeaeessanes 4 15 Disabling a Configured Object mies AaS ET P ere ees eer mien L Enabling a Conngured OSE siosiomia a aaa E Daa Ea 4 17 Deleting a Configured Object icc cissciicecerccteeatunentinconuististantantanhansiyaweanondenashinaedseusiandanaaith 4 18 Configuration Command Responses ccccecsssiereesscccereceessscneecseseennsecneas EE 419 Appendix A System Commands Appendix B TCL Support Appendix C System Oriented Show Commands SHON RANI acs cactc decades Seca tacedcacenmneneieacsiepdicconenes A O Eaei arani C 2 BOW RAWE aise a aE eRAE at eRAiAtANeIN C 5 show process nn T T MT PET E T benemiads oana A ae ied SMON SYSTE caio aea E E ued acctaneee C 10 117383 B Rev 00 XV Figures Figure 1 1 The Technician Interface and the BCC Interface ceeesceeeeeeeeeneeeees 1 1 Figure 1 2 Configuring IP and RIP on an Ethernet Interface ecceeteeeeeeees 1 5 Figure 2 1 Sample BCC Configuration BN Router cccceccssseeeeeeeeeseeeeeeeeeeees 2 4 Figure 2 2
41. ager User List the names of objects parameters VY VY and system commands you can enter next lt command gt Display syntax usage help for 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 Y Technician Interface only last command lt n gt times continued 117383 B Rev 00 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Table A 1 System Commands continued Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User back lt n gt Move your current working location or A A level back lt n gt levels closer to the root BCC configuration mode only level of the BCC configuration tree bcc Start the BCC from the Technician Vv Vv Interface prompt boot lt vol gt lt image_name gt lt vob Reboot the system VY 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 Y as IP and RIP data clearlog lt s ot_ D gt Clear all previous events from the system f event
42. aging cache off udp checksum on end station support off redirects on cache size 128 4 8 117383 B Rev 00 Configuring a Network Device 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 identifier 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 mask 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 igmp ospf rdisc rip Parameters in Current Context address cost address resolution end station support all subnet broadcast has assocaddr host cache aging broadcast mask cache size mask reply configured mac address mtu discovery System Commands name on proxy redirects state udp checksum You can modify values currently assigned to parameters of ip 192 168 133 114 255 255 255 224 or you can add RIP OSPF Router
43. anying 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 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 repro
44. cess memory detail total C 8 117383 B Rev 00 System Oriented Show Commands The table includes the following information detail Displays details about the amount of memory used by each process running on the router total Displays only memory usage totals Name The name of the process Slot Slot number Used Number of memory bytes used by each process Used Percentage of memory used by each process list Displays a list of all the processes running on each slot 117383 B Rev 00 C 9 Using the Bay Command Console BCC show system The show system lt option gt commands display information about the system state which pertains to the overall system and not to any specific protocol The show system command supports the following subcommand options buffers memory drivers protocols information tasks buffers Displays the current buffer usage for all active slots in the system Note that buffers circulate rapidly through the system A low free percentage doesn t 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 buffers free on each slot Total Total number of buffers available Free Total number of buffers free drivers Displays link modules and drivers installed on all slots If the configuration displayed di
45. device On a network device or a user end station a port is also a logical point of termination for data sent or received by a specific protocol or application For example a UNIX workstation receives syslog messages from a remote device at UDP logical port number 162 1 8 117383 B Rev 00 Overview of the BCC Interface Interface physical 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 Interface logical An addressable entity for originating and terminating connections across an IP network Protocol A configurable object that typically provides data link network transport session application or management layer services on a network device A protocol on a router may provide services box wide across all slots such as global IP or on a per interface basis such as interface IP on a router platform System commands Enable you to perform system administration tasks from any command line prompt For a complete list of system commands available at any level of the BCC interface enter at any BCC command line prompt Using Abbreviations and Acronyms Words that represent objects parameters and certain parameter values for command input or output are e Industry accepted words or standard abbreviations and acronyms e Standard Bay Networks abbreviations and acronyms For command input the BCC
46. duced 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 OTHER WARRANTIES EXPRESS OR IMPLIED INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION ANY WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE Licensee is responsible for the security of 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 iv 117383 B Rev 00 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 t
47. e BCC can read configuration and system commands Note If you create or edit ASCII files containing BCC commands you must adhere to the BCC syntax requirements described in this guide For example you must include any commands necessary to navigate to each level of the device configuration tree and any commands necessary to add modify or delete objects in the device configuration By saving BCC commands to an ASCII file you can subsequently e Edit the commands offline e Add comments to the file to describe details of the configuration e Save the edited file for later use e Use the BCC source command to edit the active configuration of Bay Networks devices of the same type and hardware configuration See Entering Configuration Commands from a File on page 117383 B Rev 00 2 27 Chapter 3 Entering Commands You can enter BCC configuration commands using basic full default or abbreviated syntax In addition command operators enable you to perform certain operations more efficiently from your current location in the device configuration tree This chapter provides information about the following topics Topic Page Command Input Features page 3 2 System Commands page 3 6 Configuration Commands page 3 7 Command Operators page 3 11 Editing Command Lines page 3 13 117383 B Rev 00 3 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Command Input Features Th
48. e BCC configuration for an AN BN or ARN router 117383 B Rev 00 2 3 Using the Bay Command Console BCC roo m gt ee ad p porel P protocol b gt P ee gt paica p gt aoed e a E INTERFACE SPECIFIC OBJECTS Services supported on a specific slot ospf 1 2 3 4 protocol ethernet 2 1 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 gt interface P protocol gt arp 1 2 3 4 1 ethernet 2 2 protocol gt interface serial 3 1 interface Figure 2 1 Sample BCC Configuration BN Router 2 4 117383 B Rev 00 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Note the tree like hierarchy of this configuration where e Box contains global objects IP Telnet TFTP and SNMP plus the physical interface objects ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 2 and serial 3 1 e Global IP contains the ARP RIP and OSPF global objects Locating Configured Objects The BCC displays and understands as command input the location or context of any object such as an IP interface in terms of a path that begins at the root box level of the device configuration tree 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 2 2 box ether
49. e 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 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 Configuration hierarchy Classes templates for creating objects exist within a tree hierarchy Just as a file system has a root directory subdirectores and files the BCC configuration system has a root level object box or stack and branch objects such as interfaces and protocols fan out from root level in a tree hierarchy The root level object for AN ANH ARN and BN platforms is box the root level object for ASN and System 5000 platforms is stack The BCC configuration command hierarchy varies according to the type of network device for example a particular type of router hub or switch However BCC commands such as help tree and back enable you to efficiently discover and navigate the configuration hierarchy You can view th
50. e configuration hierarchy by entering the help tree all command at any BCC prompt 117383 B Rev 00 Overview of the BCC Interface You create a customized configuration by using BCC commands to create new objects and to modify or delete objects in an existing configuration You begin at root level in BCC configuration mode and navigate to or create new objects in the device configuration tree For example with 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 and then add RIP to IP on that interface Figure 1 2 shows the sequence of commands necessary to build this configuration box ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 1 ip address 1 2 3 4 mask 255 0 0 0 address 1 2 3 4 IP ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip rip 1 2 3 4 BCC0017A Figure 1 2 Configuring IP and RIP on an Ethernet Interface Context Your working location or level within the BCC configuration tree 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 B Rev 00 1 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC The BCC indicates context by displaying a context sensitive prompt in configuration mode The prompt identifies the configured object at your current working location o
51. ect ip info on box state enabled forwarding forwarding ttl 30 cache timeout default mib table route all subnets disabled classless disabled max policies 32 route filters enabled rip max paths 1 ecmp method disabled isp mode disabled ospf max paths 1 icmp error limit 0 3 12 117383 B Rev 00 Entering Commands Editing Command Lines Table 3 2 describes the keystrokes you can use to edit BCC command lines Table 3 2 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 or CONTROL p to review your last input and then use other control key combinations to edit the command line as needed 117383 B Rev 00 3 13 Chapter 4 Configuring a Network Device This c
52. ed by the application of EN 55 022 Class A CISPR 22 Warning This is a Class A product In a domestic environment this product may cause radio interference in which case the user may be required to take appropriate measures Japan Nippon Requirements Only Voluntary Control Council for Interference VCCI Statement CORB HHUBRESERRERER BRS VCCI OF CED VIA ATRRMNRE CT TORE KERK CHAT 5 CBR GEES SRCTCEMHVET COMBICILHABABOIEWREBT SLIBRKENSECEMBVET Canada Requirements Only Canadian Department of Communications Radio Interference Regulations This digital apparatus lt product or system name gt does not exceed the Class A limits for radio noise emissions from digital apparatus as set out in the Radio Interference Regulations of the Canadian Department of Communications R glement sur le brouillage radio lectrique du minist re des Communications Cet appareil num rique lt product or system name gt respecte les limites de bruits radio lectriques visant les appareils num riques de classe A prescrites dans le R glement sur le brouillage radio lectrique du minist re des Communications du Canada 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
53. ering Multiple Commands per Line To enter multiple commands in the same line type a semicolon wherever you would press Return to terminate a command Example BN router Configure ethernet 2 1 from root context 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 44 Continuing a Command Line Underscore Prompt 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 3 4 117383 B Rev 00 Entering Commands You must immediately follow the initial escape character 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 escape character the BCC replaces the 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 including braces brackets and quotes Example box bozza wsh box or box EPES b
54. et Protocol TFTP Trivial File Transfer Protocol WAN wide area network 117383 B Rev 00 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Ordering Bay Networks Publications To purchase additional copies of this document or other Bay Networks publications order by part number from Bay Networks Press at the following numbers e Phone U S Canada 888 422 9773 e Phone International 510 490 4752 e FAX U S Canada and International 510 498 2609 The Bay Networks Press catalog is available on the World Wide Web at support baynetworks com Library GenMisc Bay Networks publications are available on the World Wide Web at support baynetworks com Library tpubs Bay Networks Customer Service You can purchase a support contract from your Bay Networks distributor or authorized reseller or directly from Bay Networks Services For information about or to purchase a Bay Networks service contract either call your local Bay Networks field sales office or one of the following numbers Region Telephone number Fax number United States and 800 2LANWAN then enter Express Routing 978 916 3514 Canada Code ERC 290 when prompted to purchase or renew a service contract 978 916 8880 direct Europe 33 4 92 96 69 66 33 4 92 96 69 96 Asia Pacific 61 2 9927 8888 61 2 9927 8899 Latin America 561 988 7661 561 988 7550 Information about customer service is also available on the World Wide Web at support baynetworks com
55. f the Router Software 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 B Rev 00 Configuring a Network Device 6 Check to see what you can configure sub contexts and parameters at this level ethernet 13 1 Sub Contexts ip ipx Parameters in Current Context bofl circuit name on bofl number connector receive queue length bofl retries hardware filter slot bofl timeout has state bofl tmo divisor name transmit queue length System Commands 2 delete mkdir reset attribute diags mlist restart back dinfo more rm boot dir mount rmdir cd disable mset save clear enable partition securelogin clearlog exit password show commit format ping source compact help pktdump stamp config history pop stop context loadmap prom system cp log pwe tic cwc logout readexe unmount date lso reconfig xmodem debug mget record ethernet 13 1 Based on the Sub Contexts list you can add ip interface IP or ipx interface IPX to this Ethernet port At this level the list of configurable objects depends on the board type described in the current prompt For example 100BASE T modules additionally allow you to configure an autoneg autonegotiation object at this level You can also configure modify values currently assigned to Parameters in Current Context parameters of ethernet 13 1 sh
56. ffers from that expected your configuration file may be incorrect wrong module type specified for example or there may be a problem loading the software C 10 117383 B Rev 00 System Oriented Show Commands 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 and a low free percent 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 unused memory on each slot Free Percentage of free unused memory on each slot protocols Displays which protocols are installed on 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 117383 B Rev 00 C 11 Using the Bay Command Console BCC tasks Displays the number of tasks scheduled to run on all slots This number is highly volatile and a large In Queue 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 Nu
57. file_name gt hosts supporting TFTP Technician Interface and bcc gt top level only type x lt vol gt lt filename gt Display the contents of the designated V Y file in ASCII or HEX x format xmodem rb sb ylw p n lt filename gt Transfer files to or from this device over a f dial out of band connection For more detailed information about a specific command e Enter help lt command gt at any BCC prompt for example help save e Refer to the guide Using Technician Interface Software A 10 117383 B Rev 00 Appendix B TCL Support The BCC supports the following subset of Tool Command Language TCL scripting commands on the router platform append break case e catch close concat continue eof error eval exit expr e flush for foreach gets global if incr interp join lappend lindex linsert list llength lrange lreplace Isearch Isort open proc puts rename return set source split subst switch unset uplevel upvar while 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 B Rev 00 B 1 System Oriented Show Commands Appendix C System Oriented Show Commands The BCC supports five system oriented show commands as f
58. fy first in the command line exists in the device configuration tree After the BCC finds that object it responds to any additional configuration navigation commands starting from that level This helps to shorten the command line necessary to navigate from one branch level to another 2 10 117383 B Rev 00 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Example BN router 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 5 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 Starting context ethernet 2 1 ip 192 168 33 66 255 255 255 0 BCC0009C Figure 2 5 Navigating with the BCC Backward Recursive Search Feature 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 B Rev 00 2 11 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Displaying Online Help The BCC supports the following online Help and Help oriented features Help Feature Command Get Help on commands Get an overview of Help oriented command features help List commands or command options you can enter Or lt command gt Or lt command gt lt option gt Display all BCC commands in alphabetical order syntax Note Object and parameter names that you enter as c
59. hapter describes how to complete the following tasks using BCC commands Topic Page Creating and Modifying a Device Configuration page 4 1 Entering Configuration Commands from a File page 4 15 Disabling a Configured Object page 4 16 Enabling a Configured Object page 4 17 Deleting a Configured Object page 4 18 Configuration Command Responses page 4 19 Creating and Modifying a Device Configuration You configure a Bay Networks device by defining a set of objects that collectively define its behavior on a network Each object has a set of parameters with values set either by you or by the device software You configure a device starting at the root box level of the device configuration tree Following is a BCC configuration sequence that applies to a variety of network devices 1 Open a Technician Interface session and start the BCC interface 2 Start BCC configuration mode 3 Use BCC configuration commands to create add new objects in the device configuration and to modify default values for parameters of each object to meet the requirements of your network Be sure to enable any box wide protocols not enabled automatically by the BCC software for example TFTP and Telnet Server 117383 B Rev 00 4 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC 4 Use the save command to save your configuration as a bootable binary file on the device 5 Exit BCC configuration mode exit the
60. he 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 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 wi
61. he current configuration the BCC assumes that you want to modify that object 117383 B Rev 00 3 7 Using the Bay Command Console BCC lt required_parameter gt lt value gt is any parameter value pair required to uniquely identify an object you specify in a BCC command line An object may have one or more required parameters For example the full syntax for configuring an Ethernet interface on an AN ANH ARN or BN router is ethernet slot lt s ot_no gt connector lt connector_no gt And on an ASN or System 5000 router the full syntax is 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 any configured object For example you cannot modify the address value assigned to an IP interface previously configured Address is a required parameter for configuring 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 lt parameter gt lt value gt is any parameter value pair you can optionally customize for an object you specify in a BCC command line Using Default Syntax Using default syntax you do not have to enter the name of a required parameter you enter only its value at the proper location in the command line Example BN router ethernet lt s ot
62. icates 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 user modifiable default value 3 10 117383 B Rev 00 Entering Commands Note The BCC uses required parameters to make up the unique instance identifier for a configured object You cannot change the value of any parameter that makes up the instance identifier for an object To change these parameter values you must delete the object and then add it back into the device configuration with new values Specifying Multiple Parameter Value Pairs Within a specific context in configuration mode you can 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 BN router specifying one parameter value pair per 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 Example BN router specifying multiple parameter value pairs per 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 Command Operators BCC command operators perform a named operation within the current or specified configuration context All Bay Networks AN ANH ARN ASN BN and System 5000 routers
63. ights 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 acknowledge 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
64. interface allows you to shorten existing object and parameter names for example e or eth for ethernet This is the minimum to distinguish feature of the BCC interface Example Three objects that begin with t tftp telnet and token ring exist at the root box level of the AN BN router configuration tree So that the BCC knows which of these objects you want to configure you must minimally enter at least two letters for example te for telnet at the box prompt 117383 B Rev 00 1 9 Chapter 2 Learning to Use the BCC Interface This chapter provides primary instructions on how to use the BCC interface to complete any of the following tasks Topic Page Entering and Exiting the BCC Interface page 2 1 Using the BCC Configuration Hierarchy page 2 3 Navigating in Configuration Mode page 2 7 Displaying Online Help page 2 12 Using the BCC Help File page 2 22 Displaying Configuration Data page 2 23 Entering and Exiting the BCC Interface To access the BCC interface on a Bay Networks router first open a Technician Interface session with the target device from e An ASCII terminal for example a VT 100 device locally attached to the router console port e A workstation or PC running terminal emulation software and locally attached to the router console port e A remote workstation or PC running Telnet 117383 B Rev 00 2 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC
65. is section contains information about e Using Command Abbreviations e Recalling Commands e Entering Commands from a File e Entering Multiple Commands per Line e Continuing a Command Line Underscore Prompt e Entering Comments Using Command Abbreviations For configuration command input you can shorten existing object and parameter names for example eth ethernet You must enter a sufficient number of characters for the BCC to recognize that name uniquely This is the BCC minimum to distinguish feature which applies only when entering object or parameter names in configuration mode Example BN router box eth 5 1 ethernet 5 1 back box tf tftp You can abbreviate system commands for example the BCC recognizes sh as show in contexts where there are no other command configurable object 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 Recall reenter commands from the history list as follows 3 2 117383 B Rev 00 Entering Commands Purpose Command Recall the previous command from the history list Up arrow key or Control p Recall the next command from the history list Down arrow key or Control n The command history list contains up to 20 commands by default You can increase the number of commands in the history list to a maximum of 40 by setting new values fo
66. isplay the definitions of all parameters of ethernet help lt parameter_name gt is context sensitive Help on how to perform a specific task The tasks and their corresponding help commands are help learning bcc help editing Y Y continued 117383 B Rev 00 A 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Table A 1 System Commands continued Command Purpose Login Access Privileges Manager User help lt commana gt all Technician Interface only The help command entered without arguments at the Technician Interface 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 in scrollable format detailed Help on all system commands excluding those available only in BCC mode Vv Vv history lt n gt Display the command history list or recall command number lt n gt from the history list info BCC configuration mode only List values currently assigned to all configurable parameters of this object ip lt subcommand gt lt flags gt Technician Interface only Display data from IP show a different view for each subcommand or flag you enter ip6 lt subcommand gt lt flags gt
67. ist next level branch objects Y V configured on the current object The BCC configuration mode only optional I flag causes the BCC to list object IDs in wrap around screen format mget lt obj _name gt lt obj_id gt Retrieve the values of data objects in the f VY lt attr_name gt lt attr_id gt lt inst_id gt MIB BCC only mlist lt instances gt lt obj_name gt List objects in the MIB VY VY BCC only more on off lt _lines_per_screen gt Set or display the status of the more A A utility continued 117383 B Rev 00 A 7 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Table A 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 f 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 Y c lt count gt by an interface configured for Packet Capture prom
68. ite You cannot change your privilege level from read only to read write if you logged in as User 2 2 117383 B Rev 00 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Caution When you enter BCC configuration commands with read write Manager access privileges you immediately modify the device configuration This is equivalent to dynamic mode configuration with the Bay Networks Site Manager graphical user interface 4 When you finish using BCC configuration mode enter the exit command at any prompt box exit bec gt 5 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 If you need more detailed information about Technician Interface access login or logout procedures refer to Using Technician Interface Software Using the BCC Configuration Hierarchy The help tree all and show config all commands display the configuration hierarchy or configuration tree of any Bay Networks AN ARN ASN BN or System 5000 router The help tree all command displays the hierarchy of every object you may configure but the show config all command displays only the hierarchy of objects actually configured The contents of the BCC configuration tree varies from device to device See Terminology and Concepts in Chapter 1 for more information about the BCC configuration hierarchy Figure 2 1 illustrates a sampl
69. jects in the MIB VY lt attr_id gt lt inst_id gt lt value gt Technician Interface only show lt entity gt lt option gt Display statistical information associated f A with the specified entity and option show config all Show the total configuration of the BCC only device show config Show the total configuration of the BCC only current object source lt vol gt lt filename gt Read BCC configuration commands from f a text file dynamically changing the BCC configuration mode only active device configuration source aliases env perm Read a list of aliases environment lt vol gt lt filename gt variables or dynamic permissions from a file Technician Interface only stamp Display the device image version name A and timestamp system Start a new Technician Interface session f VY that allows you to run system manager Technician Interface only privileged commands telnet d e lt escape_char gt Communicate with other hosts VY va 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 B Rev 00 A 9 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Table A 1 System Commands continued Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User tftp get put lt address gt lt vol gt lt file_name gt Send files to or retrieve files from other lt vol gt lt
70. 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 user 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 accomp
71. ll 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 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 a
72. log commit Commit make effective new values that you assign to MIB attributes compact lt volume gt Compact existing files into a contiguous W address space on a volume and compact all unused space into a single contiguous block of free space for new files on the same volume continued 117383 B Rev 00 System Commands Table A 1 System Commands continued Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User config read write read only Enter BCC configuration mode If you Vv Vv logged on as Manager you have BCC only read write access to the device configuration if you logged on as User you have read only access which allows you to show or navigate 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 _ Copy the contents of the first file to the va second file Technician Interface only cp lt vol gt lt filename1 gt lt vol gt lt filename2 gt Copy the contents of the first file to the VY second file BCC only date lt mm dd yy gt lt hh mm ss gt Display or update the system time and VY VY lt gt lt hh mm gt time z
73. lp and list parameters of an object you can add or modify from your current location Get the current value for this parameter of the current object lt object gt lt parameter gt Get legal current and default values for this parameter of the current object Get legal current and default values for this parameter of a configured object you can access from your current working context or level lt parameter gt lt BCC_instance_ID gt lt parameter gt Example BN router box ethernet 2 1 bofl Current Value enable Legal Value enable disable Default Value enable List values currently assigned to parameters of this object Describe parameters of the current object info help lt object_name gt help lt parameter_name gt Describe parameters of an object outside the current context help lt path gt lt object_name gt The lt path gt is the sequence of objects between root level and the desired context Example help ip ospf Hint Use the help tree all command to determine the lt path gt to the desired object List other objects currently configured at the next branch level of the configuration tree for this device Get Help on a specific task Iso Get Help on performing common BCC operations help learning bcc Get Help on how to edit BCC commands and command lines help editing 117383 B Rev 00 2 13 Using the Bay
74. lt vol gt bcc help lt file_name gt Examples BLN router box help file name 2 bcc help or box help file name 4 new help Note If you choose a different name for the Help file be sure to rename the file itself 2 22 117383 B Rev 00 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Displaying Help File Version Data The BCC help file version command enables you to display version data for your BCC help file bcc help Enter the command at any BCC prompt as follows Example BN router box help file version Help file 2 bcc help contains this version data Data version is 2 Creation date is 1997 Nov 20 14 42 40 hrs If a later version of the help file exists for this release you can use a web browser to obtain it from the following Bay URL http support baynetworks com Library tpubs bcc Follow the instructions at this website to obtain a copy of the BCC help file you need Displaying Configuration Data You can use the show config command to display Bay Networks device configuration commands and data Displaying the Total Device Configuration The show config all command displays the entire device configuration from any BCC prompt The output of show config all describes e Existing configured objects e Objects that the BCC automatically added to the active device configuration e Navigation back commands necessary to move to the context of the previous object configured or to return t
75. mber of tasks scheduled to run Out_Queue Number of tasks already run C 12 117383 B Rev 00 A abbreviating commands and parameters 1 9 acronyms ix ASCII files 2 27 3 4 backplane hardware C 5 Bay Networks Press x BCC accessing 1 1 2 1 configurable objects 1 3 configuration cycle 4 4 console types 2 1 defined 1 1 error messages 4 19 Help 2 12 A 5 navigating in configuration mode 2 7 platform requirements 1 2 terminology and concepts 1 3 board defined 1 6 Bootstrap Protocol BootP PROM revision date C 6 box wide objects 1 6 buffers system C 10 C class defined 1 3 command line adding comments to 3 6 continuing 3 4 117383 B Rev 00 Index command operators defined 3 11 delete 3 12 4 18 disable 3 12 4 16 enable 3 12 4 17 info 3 12 commands 2 12 back 2 7 config 1 2 configuration 3 7 editing 2 13 3 13 entering 3 1 Help 2 12 info 3 12 list of all system 3 6 A 1 lso 2 23 2 25 pwc 2 6 show config 2 23 2 25 2 26 source 3 3 configuration abbreviated syntax 3 9 commands 3 7 console C 2 context specific 2 25 data 2 23 default syntax 3 8 file hardware C 5 full syntax 3 7 hierarchy 1 4 method of 4 2 new 4 1 total 2 23 connector 1 8 console subcommands C 2 Index 1 context changing 2 7 current 2 6 defined 1 5 2 5 displaying 2 6 context sensitive prompt 2 6 continuing a command line
76. net 2 1 ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 1 ip address 1 2 3 4 mask 255 0 0 0 address 1 2 3 4 IP ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 rip rip 1 2 3 4 BCCO0017A Figure 2 2 Object Location or Context 117383 B Rev 00 2 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC 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 Displaying Context In BCC configuration mode use the pwe print working context command to display the path from root box level to your current level in the device configuration tree For example rip 192 168 125 34 pwc This command displays the full path from root box level to the current level rip 192 168 125 34 The output appears as follows 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 Enter the pwc command at any prompt in BCC configuration mode You can also make a quick determination of your current working location by simply looking at the configuration prompt which is context sensitive Context Sensitive Prompts The BCC shows in the command line prompt your current working context location within the BCC configuration tree Example BN router box ethernet 2 1 ethernet 2 1 ip 192 16
77. nterface more command affects only the current login session doesn t change the MIB and therefore doesn t 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 a system allows 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 for a user to enter a password If this timeout period occurs the system hangs up on the line Command line timeout value relevant only if modem control is enabled If someone doesn t 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 not 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 PAT
78. ny 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 questions 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 117383 B Rev 00 vV Contents About This Guide As 3 LCs one Re one S CReN Tne mee Tne MENT mentee Tr onern TT viii EE PEG E E E E E A E E A ix Ordering Bay Networks PUublbations cidscsarners and inoue naa A xX Bay Networks Customer TAGE sanss barrina inanakan kaa ASA ERARA xX Fow to Ger HEN siainen ae aaO
79. o the root box level of the active device configuration 117383 B Rev 00 2 23 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Example bcc gt show config all box type freln board slot 1 type srml back board slot 2 type genf back board slot 3 type wffddi2m ethernet slot 2 connector 1 circuit name E21 alpha ip address 192 168 3 4 mask 255 255 255 224 broadcast 192 168 3 5 rip back arp back back back ftp default volume 2 back snmp community label public access read writ manager address 0 0 0 0 back manager address 192 168 9 9 Note Refer to the section Identifying Board Types in the Router Software Release Notes to translate board type values such as qenf see the entry for board slot 2 above into detailed module descriptions such as Quad Ethernet without Hardware Filters nf no filters 2 24 117383 B Rev 00 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Displaying the Configuration of One Object You can view objects configured within a specific part of the BCC configuration tree by using the show config command or the Iso command Example show config BLN router You can use the show config command to view the configuration of a specific configured object Navigate to the object in configuration mode and enter the show config command The following BLN router example shows everything configured on ethernet 2 1 box eth 2 1 ethernet 2 1 show config ethernet sl
80. ollows show config show console show hardware show process show system This appendix describes all BCC system oriented show commands except for show config The section Displaying Configuration Data in Chapter 2 describes the show config command 117383 B Rev 00 C 1 Using the Bay Command Console BCC show console config The show console lt option gt commands display console port configuration and statistics information The show console command supports the following subcommand options config stats Displays serial port configuration and Technician Interface environment information for the serial ports configured on your system or for a specific port Entered without an option this subset of commands displays the total number of ports configured on the system The table includes the following information Port Number Port State Port Name Port number for the information being displayed Valid ports are 1 2 3 and 4 Not all systems have four physical ports A configured port that doesn t exist is in the Absent state Port s current state as follows Absent Not physically present Disabled Unavailable Down Unavailable e Init Initializing Up Available Name that the system has given to the port Users may not 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
81. one delete lt filename gt lt volume gt Delete the file from the specified volume A Technician Interface only see rm for BCC equivalent delete lt BCC_instance_ID gt Delete the object described in the current A 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 continued 117383 B Rev 00 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Table A 1 System Commands continued Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User diags lt s ot_ D gt Perform CPU memory backbone and V link diagnostics before downloading the GAME image and rebooting on the specified slot dinfo Display the status of each file system va V volume on this device dir lt vol gt Display the contents of the file system A A 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 V 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 Y lt attr_id gt lt inst_id gt MIB Technician Interface only getcfg Di
82. onfiguration commands are not in this list Refer to the and help tree commands later in this table help commands Display more detail on all BCC commands in alphabetical order syntax and terse command descriptions help commands more Get full details on a specific command help lt command gt Example To get full details on the save command enter help save Get Help on symbols used to express BCC command syntax Get configuration data any BCC context or command mode help syntax Show the device configuration tree as follows e List in hierarchical format all objects configurable in the device configuration tree regardless of BCC mode normal or configuration mode e List in hierarchical format all objects configurable on the current object help tree all help tree Show in BCC full syntax the configuration of the total device show config all Save the existing configuration to a file Enter the all option to save the total device configuration Leave out the all option to save only the configuration of the current object and its dependent subcontexts show config all file lt vol gt lt filename gt 2 12 117383 B Rev 00 Learning to Use the BCC Interface Help Feature Get configuration data BCC configuration mode only List the names of objects parameters and commands you can enter next Command Get command usage He
83. ot 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 Example Iso You can enter Iso in configuration mode to view any instances of objects configured at your current location in the active device configuration as follows ip 192 168 155 151 255 255 255 0 lso arp 192 168 155 151 1 rip 192 168 155 151 Use the Iso command if you have no need to display the contents of the current object in full BCC configuration syntax 117383 B Rev 00 2 25 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Displaying Binary Configuration Files as BCC Syntax After booting the device from a binary configuration file you can 1 Use the show config command to view the current device configuration in readable BCC syntax For an example of show config output refer to Displaying the Total Device Configuration on page page 2 23 2 Enter new configuration commands to override elements of the active device configuration See Chapter 3 for more information about how to enter BCC configuration commands 3 Save the file as an ASCII configuration file that the BCC can read using the source command See Saving Commands on a Workstation below for instructions 4 Save the file as a binary configuration file bootable on the same device or on another device See Saving the Active Configuration as a Bootable Binary File on page page 2
84. own above The list of System Commands always appears along with information about configurable objects and parameters 117383 B 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 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
85. ox The BCC then adds FTP to the device configuration Note the new ftp prompt 29 Check the definitions for parameters of FTP ftp help ftp ftp Parameters on Identifies the parent s of this object state Indicates the administrative state of this object enabled disabled default volume Specifies the default volume where transferred files ar written retrieved 117383 B 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 qenf 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 117383 B Rev 00 Configuring a Network Device 34 Return to root level ftp box box 35 Save the file using a name other than config un
86. oxo sesi box or box box_ box The BCC displays the underscore prompt after you type the opening symbol because it is expecting data plus the corresponding closing symbol 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 117383 B Rev 00 3 5 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Entering Comments You can use a text editor such as vi on a UNIX workstation to add descriptive comments to a BCC configuration file Enter comments in the following format box lt command gt comment or box comment box lt command gt Example AN router box board slot 1 type andse 192 168 47 129 192 168 47 21 When you finish editing the file save it on your workstation or PC The comments are for reference only The BCC does not use or retain any comments you enter e During a BCC configuration session with a Bay Networks device e When importing a configuration file that contains comments refer to Saving Commands on a Workstation in Chapter 2 For this reason comments also do not appear in the output of any show config command System Commands Bay Networks AN ANH ARN ASN BLN and System 5000 routers support all system commands described in Appendix A For help on a specific command enter help lt command gt at any BCC prompt for example help sa
87. r level within the configuration hierarchy For example after logging into 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 Global Box wide objects Objects that provide services uniformly to all slots of a network device box wide for example global IP BGP TCP SNMP FTP NTP TFTP and Telnet Some protocols such as IP RIP and OSPF have global and interface level objects Board The BCC uses the name board to identify any logic or circuit board in a Bay Networks device Each board occupies a s ot in a network device On some Bay Networks products one board may contain another board such as an RMON probe or a data collection module DCM All board objects have an associated type parameter For example qenf Quad Ethernet with Filters identifies the type of a board or module in a specific slot on a BN router Note Refer to the Release Notes for module descriptions based on the literal value of the type parameter for any board object Slot The physical position of a module installed in a network device Bay Networks has single slot single slot stackable and multislot devices Multislot devices such as the BLN or BCN router accommodate one system SRML or link interface module per slot Single slot devices such as the AN ASN and ARN router accommodate one base module in slot 1 1 or 2 adapter
88. r the history parameter of the console and telnet objects Example box telnet telnet server server history 30 server history history 30 server back telnet back box Entering Commands from a File With Manager login privileges 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 changes 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 dynamically overwrite the current configuration 117383 B Rev 00 3 3 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Note If the BCC detects an error in the source file it stops reading commands into the device configuration Syntax for the source command is as follows source lt volume gt lt filename gt For information about how to save as an ASCII file the output of the show config command or a manually entered set of commands refer to Saving Commands on a Workstation on page page 2 27 Note If you edit ASCII files containing BCC commands you must adhere to BCC syntax requirements including any commands necessary to navigate to each level of the device configuration tree Ent
89. splay network boot parameters VY va Display the current parameter settings Technician Interface AN routers only used to determine the source of image and configuration files continued 117383 B Rev 00 System Commands Table A 1 System Commands continued Command Purpose Login Access Privileges Manager User help commands more lt commana gt syntax tree lt box_level_object gt learning bcc editing BCC only help commands help lt command gt help syntax help tree all help lt object_name gt help lt parameter_name gt help lt task gt The word help entered without arguments displays an overview of BCC Help oriented features That screen describes how to get e An alphabetical list of all commands with syntax and terse descriptions Detailed Help on a specific command Help on how to interpret BCC syntax symbols A hierarchical list the configuration tree of all objects you can configure On this platform use all On the current object omit all Definitions for parameters of the object described by its path from box level AN ARN BN or stack level ASN System5000 For example help ip ospf defines parameters of the global ospf object and help ethernet ip defines parameters of the IP interface on an Ethernet port Definitions of all parameters of the current object For example help bofl causes the BCC to d
90. support the following command operators in BCC configuration mode with read write privileges Table 3 1 117383 B Rev 00 3 11 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Table 3 1 Operator BCC Command Operators Function disable Change the administrative state of a configured object from enabled to disabled as follows ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 disable You can accomplish the same change by assigning the value disabled to the state parameter of an object you want to disable enable Change the administrative state of a configured object from disabled to enabled as follows ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 enable You can accomplish the same change by assigning the value enabled to the state parameter of an object you want to reenable delete Delete the object identified in the BCC context sensitive prompt For example the following command deletes the IP interface address 1 2 3 4 ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0 delete CAUTION Deleting an object at one level of the configuration tree causes the BCC to automatically delete any branches configured on that object For example if you delete an IP interface the BCC deletes any protocols such as RIP ARP or OSPF configured on that interface info List the names and values currently assigned to parameters of the current working context For example entering info after ip at box level lists the values currently assigned to parameters of the IP global obj
91. t c p 3 ethernet 13 4 arp rip Global Services manager 0 0 0 0 H Figure 4 1 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 B Rev 00 Using the Bay Command Console BCC Enter the name of 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 assigned to the new current object CONTINUE Enter for a list of parameters and objects configurable in this context or location in the configuration tree 1 Enter an object name 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 B Rev 00 Configuring a Network Device 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 All rights reserved Login Manager Mounting new volume Device label Directory 2 New Present Working Directory 2 Welcome to the Backbone Technician Interface
92. ta 2 23 Displaying the Total Device Configuration cccccceeeeeeeeseeeeeeees meister paon 2 23 Displaying the Configuration of One Object seissisisisniinanm 2 25 Displaying Binary Configuration Files as BCC Syntax ccecceecceceeeeeeesteeeteeees 2 26 Saving show config Output to an ASCII file on the Router n 2 26 Saving the Active Configuration as a Bootable Binary File ccccccssseeeesssteeeeeeseaes 2 26 Saving Commands on a Workstation cee E EE A re 2 27 Chapter 3 Entering Commands COUPEE Input FEIE S oasiak e iaeei aa bna Neehi Tae aa aaa 3 2 Using Command Abbreviations ieee erai eNi en ere Sates ieee Preeti SANE Le Ca TUR snare Paetsch ede laren nee tate Gaiaa 3 2 Entering Commands foma FIG ccc ssar aici anchors ncutatrtaniusahieee aside abwertn tiene 3 3 Entering Multiple Commands per Line ieissar 3 4 Continuing a Command Line Underscore Prompt ssessssssssssssrssrrresrnsssrressresrnees 3 4 Entering Comments T RIT N T T F D Siti SOS Id COMTANS sirere i cee nied stared te aed nid acl deep aN 3 6 Configurator OMIM ENS sanoissa a 3 7 Using Basic Full Syntax TEA ER E E A ai P 3 7 USING Daat SVEN sciarra aA E aaa Usto PSE AAU SER suiak niena Raae E Sa aE in 3 9 Specilying Parameler Valtos sosiisssrraisoninaidinn i ainiai raan aaiae 3 10 Required Derived and Other Parameters ccccccccsssceeesesseeeeesenteeeesesnaees 3 10 Specifying Multiple Parameter
93. the router Enter BCC configuration mode by entering the config command at the bec gt prompt For tasks related to device management managing files on the router viewing Statistics or the event log and so on you can enter Technician Interface commands directly at the BCC command line prompt For more information about Technician Interface commands refer to Using Technician Interface Software Platform Requirements The BCC software requires 16 MB of dynamic RAM DRAM to run on any AN ANH ARN ASN BCN BLN and System 5000 router platform In addition a minimum of 2 0 MB of DRAM must be available when you start the first BCC session on a slot 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 When memory resources are insufficient to support additional BCC sessions on a login slot the system displays the following message BCC requires 2 MB of free memory Current available memory is lt size gt Separate read write sessions on different slots have independent views of the current configuration The BCC does not dynamically update the configuration view in one session based on configuration changes made in another session 1 2 117383 B Rev 00 Overview of the BCC Interface Configurable Objects Refer to the Release Notes for
94. til 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 ping 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 Routerl gt logout Entering Configuration Commands from a File If you have Manager read write login privileges you can use the source command to read BCC configuration and navigation commands from a designated ASCII source file into the active device configuration Caution The source command makes immediate changes to the active device configuration 117383 B Rev 00 4 15 Using the Bay Command Console BCC The source command takes new BCC configuration commands and data from an ASCII file and merges those commands with existing configuration data in active device memory If the file you specify in the source command contains configuration commands pertaining to objects already defined on a device the commands in the file dynamically overwrite the configuration of those objects Syntax for the so
95. u should be able to perform network device configuration maintenance and troubleshooting For additional sources of information about configuring Bay Networks routers see the task map for this release Note Because the BCC makes real time changes to a device configuration Bay Networks recommends that you first learn about BCC behavior on a device not connected to your production network After you become comfortable with using the BCC run it on a device in your production network 117383 B Rev 00 vii Using the Bay Command Console BCC Conventions angle brackets lt gt bold text braces brackets ellipsis points Indicate a variable in a command line The word or words inside the angle brackets describe the type of variable for example lt host address gt Do not type the angle brackets when entering an actual value for a variable Example if command syntax is ping lt ip address gt enter ping 192 32 10 12 Indicates text usually commands that you enter at the BCC command line prompt Example Enter reset Enclose a list of e Command keywords or configuration parameter values one of which you can enter e BCC instance IDs of configured objects Example arp 1 2 3 4 1 rip 1 2 3 4 e A literal string such as the literal value of the console prompt Example prompt slot 1 Yields a prompt such as 9 1 Indicate command keywords arg
96. uments or filters not required taken as optional command input by the BCC Repeat the last element of the command as needed Example ethernet 2 1 lt parameter gt lt value gt Translating this syntax to a specific command ethernet 2 1 bofl retries 2 hardware filter enabled viii 117383 B Rev 00 italic text quotation marks screen text vertical line About This Guide Indicates variable values in command syntax descriptions new terms file and directory names and book titles Indicate a literal string in a command line the title of a chapter or a section within a book Indicates BCC or Technician Interface output to a console or Telnet screen for example prompts system messages statistical data and configuration data Separates choices for required or optional command keywords and arguments You must enter only one of the choices available Do not type the vertical line when entering a command Example If the command syntax is show ip routes rip you enter either show ip routes or show ip rip but not both Acronyms ARP Address Resolution Protocol ATM Asynchronous Transfer Mode BN Backbone Node DCM Data Collection Module IP Internet Protocol IPX Internet Packet Exchange LAN local area network MAC media access control OSPF Open Shortest Path First RIP Routing Information Protocol SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol TCP IP Transmission Control Protocol Intern
97. urce command is as follows source lt volume gt lt filename gt For information about how to save as an ASCII file the output of the show config command or a manually entered set of commands refer to Saving Commands on a Workstation in Chapter 2 Disabling a Configured Object In most cases the BCC automatically enables objects that you add to the device configuration However you may need to 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 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 4 16 117383 B Rev 00 Configuring a Network Device Enabling a Configured Object If you disable a configured object to manage or troubleshoot the local device you can use the BCC enable command to reenable that object Here is a BN router example of how to enable an object rip previously disabled on ip 1 2 3 4 255 0 0 0
98. 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 Af A location or level in the tree starting from BCC configuration mode only root level readexe lt vol gt lt filename gt Validate the checksums of an executable f V image and print out all the file header information record open close fileonly pause Record to a file all messages written to 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 Vv specified slot If the slot ID argument is absent the GAME image restarts on all slots continued 117383 B Rev 00 System Commands Table A 1 System Commands continued Login Access Privileges Command Purpose Manager User rm lt vol gt lt filename gt Remove delete the file from the V specified volume BCC only save config aliases lt vol gt lt filename gt Store the current configuration alias list or system event securelogin Turn SecurlD access to the device on A and off via Telnet set lt obj_name gt lt obj_id gt lt attr_name gt Modifies data ob
99. ve 3 6 117383 B Rev 00 Entering Commands Configuration Commands Caution Configuration commands and source commands make real time changes to the device configuration This section describes how to enter BCC configuration commands using any of the following formats e Basic full syntax e Default syntax e Abbreviated syntax BCC syntax consists of object names parameter names and values and various types of punctuation Note in particular that 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 either accept the default value or supply a value for each parameter associated with a configurable object e Parameters and their values must appear as a pair in the same command line 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 lt object name gt 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 t

Download Pdf Manuals

image

Related Search

Related Contents

Satellite X200  Targus USB Mobile Port Replicator Network Card User Manual  Samsung FTQ352IWUW Range User Manual  Philips Special 929689611105  Influence Networks: mode d`emploi » OWNI, News, Augmented  Theta Digital Dreadnaught II User's Manual  Installation und Anpassung NetShelter™ SX 24HE-Schrank  Introduction to Health Summary  TS870 Manual  manutenzione  

Copyright © All rights reserved.
Failed to retrieve file