46
Configuring Interfaces
Monitoring and Maintaining the Interfaces
Using FEFI to Maintain the Fiber FE Interfaces
A far end fault is an error in the link that one station detects but the other does not, such as a disconnected Tx wire. In
this example, the sending station still receives valid data and detects that the link is good through the link integrity
monitor. The sending station does not detect that its own transmission is not being received by the other station. A
100BASE-FX station that detects a remote fault like this modifies its transmitted IDLE stream to send a special bit pattern
(FEFI IDLE pattern) to inform the neighbor of the remote fault. The FEFI-IDLE pattern then triggers a shutdown of the
remote port (notconnect).
Fiber FastEthernet hardware uses far end fault indication (FEFI) to bring the link down on both sides of the link in these
situations. A similar function is provided by link negotiation for Gigabit Ethernet. FEFI is not supported on copper ports,
which do not usually have issues in which one station can detect while the other cannot. Copper ports use Ethernet link
pulses to monitor the link.
With FEFI, no forwarding loop occurs because there is no connectivity between the ports. If the link is up on one side
and down on the other, however, blackholing of traffic might occur. Use Unidirectional Link Detection (UDLD) to prevent
traffic blackholing.
Default FEFI Configuration
FEFI is enabled globally and not configurable on the switch, however it applies only to the fiber Fast Ethernet SFP
interfaces on the switch.
show interfaces
[
interface-id]
transceiver
[
detail
|
dom-supported-list | module
number
| properties
| threshold-table
]
Display these physical and operational status about an SFP module:
interface-id–
(Optional) Display configuration and status for a
specified physical interface.
detail–
(Optional) Display calibration properties, including high and
low numbers and any alarm information for any Digital Optical
Monitoring (DoM)-capable transceiver if one is installed in the
switch.
dom-supported-list–
(Optional) List all supported DoM
transceivers.
module
number
–
(Optional) Limit display to interfaces on module
on the switch. The range is 1 to 9. This option is not available if
you entered a specific interface ID.
properties–
(Optional) Display speed, duplex, and inline power
settings on an interface
threshold-table–
(Optional) Display alarm and warning threshold
table
show interfaces
[
interface-id
] [{
transceiver
properties
|
detail
}]
module number
]
Display physical and operational status about an SFP module.
show port-type
[
eni
|
nni
|
uni
]
Display interface type information for the Cisco ME switch.
show running-config interface
[
interface-id
]
Display the running configuration in RAM for the interface.
show version
Display the hardware configuration, software version, the names and
sources of configuration files, and the boot images.
show controllers ethernet-controller
interface-id
phy
Display the operational state of the auto-MDIX feature on the
interface.
Table 8
Show Commands for Interfaces (continued)
Command
Purpose
Summary of Contents for IE 4000
Page 12: ...8 Configuration Overview Default Settings After Initial Switch Configuration ...
Page 52: ...48 Configuring Interfaces Monitoring and Maintaining the Interfaces ...
Page 108: ...104 Configuring Switch Clusters Additional References ...
Page 128: ...124 Performing Switch Administration Additional References ...
Page 130: ...126 Configuring PTP ...
Page 140: ...136 Configuring CIP Additional References ...
Page 146: ...142 Configuring SDM Templates Configuration Examples for Configuring SDM Templates ...
Page 192: ...188 Configuring Switch Based Authentication Additional References ...
Page 244: ...240 Configuring IEEE 802 1x Port Based Authentication Additional References ...
Page 298: ...294 Configuring VLANs Additional References ...
Page 336: ...332 Configuring STP Additional References ...
Page 408: ...404 Configuring DHCP Additional References ...
Page 450: ...446 Configuring IGMP Snooping and MVR Additional References ...
Page 490: ...486 Configuring SPAN and RSPAN Additional References ...
Page 502: ...498 Configuring Layer 2 NAT ...
Page 770: ...766 Configuring IPv6 MLD Snooping Related Documents ...
Page 930: ...926 Configuring IP Unicast Routing Related Documents ...
Page 976: ...972 Configuring Cisco IOS IP SLAs Operations Additional References ...
Page 978: ...974 Dying Gasp ...
Page 990: ...986 Configuring Enhanced Object Tracking Monitoring Enhanced Object Tracking ...
Page 994: ...990 Configuring MODBUS TCP Displaying MODBUS TCP Information ...
Page 996: ...992 Ethernet CFM ...
Page 1066: ...1062 Using an SD Card SD Card Alarms ...