Chapter 18 Commands
Management Switch Card User’s Guide
643
18.4 Common Command Notation
The following table describes commonly used command parameter notation.
Table 345
Common Command Notation
NOTATION
DESCRIPTION
[…]
The optional fields in a command are enclosed in square brackets [], for instance,
ip ping
<
ip-address
>
[<count>]
means that the count field is optional.
|
The | symbol means “or”.
sub1
This represents subtending port 1. On the MSC’s front panel this is SFP slot 1.
sub2
This represents subtending port 2. On the MSC’s front panel this is SFP slot 2.
up1
This represents uplink port 1. On the MSC’s front panel this is Gigabit interface 3 (a Gigabit
Ethernet port/SFP slot pair).
up2
This represents uplink port 2. On the MSC’s front panel this is Gigabit interface 4 (a Gigabit
Ethernet port/SFP slot pair).
enet1 ~
enet
n
This represents a Gigabit Ethernet port where
n
varies depending on the number of Gigabit
Ethernet ports. On the MSC’s front panel, this is a Gigabit interface (a Gigabit Ethernet port/
SFP slot pair).
etype
:
Ethernet type in hexadecimal.
t1
This is the trunk group name.
giga-port
This represents the Gigabit Ethernet uplink port(s) or subtending port(s) or both. Choose
sub1
|
sub2
|
up1
|
up2
or
enet1 ~ enet
n
if trunking is disabled,
tsub
|
tup
if trunking is
enabled.
index
This is an integer that sets the index number of a table entry. The range starts at 1. The end
of the range varies by command.
ip-address
This represents a valid IP address. An IP version four address should be in dotted decimal
notation. An IPv6 address and prefix should be in colon hexadecimal notation. 192.168.1.1
is an example of an IPv4 address.
This is an example IPv6 address: 2001:0db8:1a2b:0015:0000:0000:1a2f:0000.
IPv6 addresses can be abbreviated in two ways:
Leading zeros in a block can be omitted. So 2001:0db8:1a2b:0015:0000:0000:1a2f:0000
can be written as 2001:db8:1a2b:15:0:0:1a2f:0.
Any number of consecutive blocks of zeros can be replaced by a double colon. A double
colon can only appear once in an IPv6 address. So
2001:0db8:0000:0000:1a2f:0000:0000:0015 can be written as
2001:0db8::1a2f:0000:0000:0015, 2001:0db8:0000:0000:1a2f::0015,
2001:db8::1a2f:0:0:15 or 2001:db8:0:0:1a2f::15.
mac
This represents a MAC address in "a0:c5:12:34:56:78" format.
mux
The encapsulation method. Choose either
llc
or
vcmux
.
mg-name
The media gateway name. Set this using
profile voip h248
.
netmask
This represents the bit number of the subnet mask of an IP address. The range is 0 to 32.
To find the bit number, convert the subnet mask to binary and add all of the 1’s together.
Take “255.255.255.0” for example. 255 converts to eight 1’s in binary. There are three
255’s, so add three eights together and you get the bit number (24).
port
This represents the UDP or TCP port number of a service.
priority
The VLAN priority setting (0~7).
slot
This represents the number of an individual chassis slot where a line card is located.
Summary of Contents for MSC1000G Series
Page 38: ...Table of Contents Management Switch Card User s Guide 38...
Page 39: ...39 PART I Introduction...
Page 40: ...40...
Page 54: ...Chapter 1 Getting to Know Your MSC Management Switch Card User s Guide 54...
Page 61: ...61 PART II Web Configurator...
Page 62: ...62...
Page 80: ...Chapter 3 The Web Configurator Management Switch Card User s Guide 80...
Page 162: ...Chapter 5 Alarm Screens Management Switch Card User s Guide 162...
Page 178: ...Chapter 6 Diagnostic Screens Management Switch Card User s Guide 178...
Page 184: ...Chapter 7 Maintenance Screens Management Switch Card User s Guide 184...
Page 204: ...Chapter 8 Multicast Screens Management Switch Card User s Guide 204...
Page 226: ...Chapter 9 Subscriber Port Setup Screens Management Switch Card User s Guide 226...
Page 227: ...Chapter 9 Subscriber Port Setup Screens Management Switch Card User s Guide 227...
Page 330: ...Chapter 10 IMA Screens Management Switch Card User s Guide 330...
Page 412: ...Chapter 11 Profile Screens Management Switch Card User s Guide 412...
Page 512: ...Chapter 12 Statistics Screens Management Switch Card User s Guide 512...
Page 560: ...Chapter 13 Switch Screens Management Switch Card User s Guide 560...
Page 598: ...Chapter 15 VLAN Screens Management Switch Card User s Guide 598...
Page 636: ...Chapter 16 VoIP Management Switch Card User s Guide 636...
Page 638: ...Chapter 17 Config Save Management Switch Card User s Guide 638...
Page 639: ...639 PART III Commands...
Page 640: ...640...
Page 646: ...Chapter 18 Commands Management Switch Card User s Guide 646...
Page 682: ...Chapter 19 acl Commands Management Switch Card User s Guide 682...
Page 690: ...Chapter 20 alarm Commands Management Switch Card User s Guide 690...
Page 696: ...Chapter 22 config Commands Management Switch Card User s Guide 696...
Page 754: ...Chapter 28 multicast Commands Management Switch Card User s Guide 754...
Page 840: ...Chapter 29 port Commands Management Switch Card User s Guide 840...
Page 924: ...Chapter 30 profile Commands Management Switch Card User s Guide 924...
Page 926: ...Chapter 31 redundant Commands Management Switch Card User s Guide 926...
Page 1062: ...Chapter 35 vlan Commands Management Switch Card User s Guide 1062...
Page 1103: ...1103 PART IV Troubleshooting Specifications Appendices and Index...
Page 1104: ...1104...
Page 1134: ...Chapter 39 Product Specifications Management Switch Card User s Guide 1134...
Page 1146: ...Appendix B Legal Information Management Switch Card User s Guide 1146...