Avaya Using Bay Command Console Software Manuel d'utilisateur

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Part No. 115976-A Rev. A
February 1997
Router Software Version 11.01
Site Manager Software Version 5.01
Using the
Bay Command Console
Vue de la page 0
1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 111 112

Résumé du contenu

Page 1 - Bay Command Console

Part No. 115976-A Rev. AFebruary 1997Router Software Version 11.01Site Manager Software Version 5.01 Using the Bay Command Console

Page 3 - Bay Networks Software License

Using the Bay Command Console4-12 115976-A Rev. A stub true stub-metric 1 import-summaries truearea/0.0.0.1> cwc .. Go back to the previous lev

Page 4 - (continued)

Examples115976-A Rev. A 4-13 area 0.0.0.0 type broadcast priority 1 transit-delay 1 retransmission-interval 5 hello-interval 10 dead-interval 4

Page 5 - Contents

Using the Bay Command Console4-14 115976-A Rev. Abgp> help Discover what you can configure next in this context.Attributes: group: Parents of this

Page 6

Examples115976-A Rev. A 4-15peer/192.168.10.1/192.168.10.2/14> info Verify the values currently assigned to BGP peer/192.168.10.1/192.168.10.2/14.

Page 7

Using the Bay Command Console4-16 115976-A Rev. Ato-as/14/announce all> accept "accept-192.168.0.0" Add a BGP accept policy called “acce

Page 8

Examples115976-A Rev. A 4-17Configuring TELNET, FTP, SNMP, and NTPThis is an example of how to configure four global/box-wide services on a BN router.

Page 9

Using the Bay Command Console4-18 115976-A Rev. Amanager/public/0.0.0.0> info Verify the values currently assigned to attributes of manager/publi

Page 10

Examples115976-A Rev. A 4-19Attributes: default-volume: <no help available> group: Parents of this object. legal-sub-protocols: Classes this

Page 12 - Conventions

115976-A Rev. A Index-1Aabbreviating commands, 1-10abbreviations, 1-10acronyms, xivattributesassigned or configured values, 2-17changing or modifying,

Page 13

115976-A Rev. A xi About This Guide If you are responsible for configuring and managing Bay Networks ® routers, you need to read this guide. This gui

Page 14 - Acronyms

Using the Bay Command ConsoleIndex-2 115976-A Rev. Aconfigurationabbreviated syntax, 2-32commands, 2-29context-specific, 2-20data, 2-18default syntax, 2

Page 15

Index115976-A Rev. A Index-3instancedefined, 1-3identifier, 1-4, 2-6, 2-10, 2-33, 3-1Interface, 1-7Lline, defined, 1-7list of attribute values, 2-27locat

Page 16

Using the Bay Command ConsoleIndex-4 115976-A Rev. Aspecifying a path, 2-10, 2-11subprotocols attribute, 2-18Support Source CD, xviiisystem commands,

Page 17 - Customer Service FTP

Using the Bay Command Consolexii 115976-A Rev. A Before You Begin If you are installing the 11.01 software on a new router , you should first• Install

Page 18 - CompuServe

About This Guide 115976-A Rev. A xiii Example: ip/1.2.3.4> info group {ethernet/2/1} state enabled sub-protocols {arp/1.2.3.4/1 rip/1.2.3.4}

Page 19 - How to Get Help

Using the Bay Command Consolexiv 115976-A Rev. A Acronyms AS Autonomous SystemBGP Border Gateway ProtocolBofL Breath of LifeIP Internet ProtocolLAN l

Page 20

115976-A Rev. A xv Technical Support and Online Services To ensure comprehensive network support to our customers and partners worldwide, Bay Network

Page 21 - Overview

Using the Bay Command Consolexvi 115976-A Rev. A Bay Networks Customer Service If you purchased your Bay Networks product from a distributor or auth

Page 22 - Configurable Objects

Technical Support and Online Services 115976-A Rev. A xvii Bay Networks Information Services Bay Networks Information Services provide up-to-date sup

Page 23 - Terminology and Concepts

Using the Bay Command Consolexviii 115976-A Rev. A Support Source CD This CD-ROM -- sent quarterly to all contracted customers -- is a complete Bay N

Page 24 - <connector>

Technical Support and Online Services 115976-A Rev. A xix InfoFACTS InfoFACTS is the Bay Networks free 24-hour fax-on-demand service. This automated

Page 25

ii 115976-A Rev. A4401 Great America Parkway 8 Federal StreetSanta Clara, CA 95054 Billerica, MA 01821 Copyright © 1988–1997 Bay Networks, Inc. All r

Page 27

115976-A Rev. A 1-1 Chapter 1Overview BCC and the Technician Interface The BCC is an enhanced (object-oriented) command line interface for configurin

Page 28 - 1-8 115976-A Rev. A

Using the Bay Command Console1-2 115976-A Rev. A With the BCC interface, you use commands primarily to perform tasks related to device configuration,

Page 29 - Examples:

Overview115976-A Rev. A 1-3Terminology and ConceptsThe BCC defines certain networking terminology and concepts in a consistent way, so that you can con

Page 30 - Example:

Using the Bay Command Console1-4 115976-A Rev. AOptional Attributes -- The set of attributes for which you can optionally specify customized values, r

Page 31 - Command Groups

Overview115976-A Rev. A 1-5 Figure 1-2. BCC Command Hierarchy -- Model BLN/BCN Routertelnet clientpeerannouncenetworksnetworksareatrusted-hostnetwork

Page 32

Using the Bay Command Console1-6 115976-A Rev. AYou can configure a Bay Networks device by defining physical-layer objects first (such as interfaces), th

Page 33 - Chapter 2

Overview115976-A Rev. A 1-7Box-wide/Global Objects -- Objects that provide services uniformly to all slots of a network device (box-wide); for example

Page 34 - 2-2 115976-A Rev. A

Using the Bay Command Console1-8 115976-A Rev. ACircuit -- Sometimes used by the BCC configuration system to denote (1) A dedicated communication path;

Page 35 - 115976-A Rev. A 2-3

Overview115976-A Rev. A 1-9Naming and Numbering ConventionsThe BCC uses one model to represent configuration data across all Bay Networks products. Thi

Page 36 - bcc>)

115976-A Rev. A iii Bay Networks Software License This Software License shall govern the licensing of all software provided to licensee by Bay Networ

Page 37 - Displaying Context

Using the Bay Command Console1-10 115976-A Rev. AAttributes and Values (for IP on an ethernet interface): group {ethernet/2/1} state enabled sub-pr

Page 38 - Context-Sensitive Prompts

Overview115976-A Rev. A 1-11Command GroupsThe BCC supports a limited set of configuration and system commands in this release. For more specific inform

Page 40 - (Root Context:)

115976-A Rev. A 2-1Chapter 2Learning to Use the BCC InterfaceEntering and Exiting the BCC InterfaceTo access the BCC command line interface, first open

Page 41

Using the Bay Command Console2-2 115976-A Rev. A3. When you finish using the BCC, enter the exit command at any BCC prompt. Exiting the BCC returns you

Page 42

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-3Figure 2-1. Example BCC Configuration (BN Router)In this example, OSPF and ARP are configured on (ar

Page 43

Using the Bay Command Console2-4 115976-A Rev. AUsing the file system analogy:• The object named box (the container denoted by the root-level prompt, b

Page 44

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-5Configuration ContextYou describe the location of an object in the BCC configuration system by speci

Page 45 - <attribute>

Using the Bay Command Console2-6 115976-A Rev. AContext-Sensitive PromptsThe BCC configuration system shows in the command line prompt your current wor

Page 46

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-7Changing Context LevelsIn the BCC configuration system, you use the cwc (change working context) co

Page 47

iv 115976-A Rev. A Bay Networks Software License (continued) 9. Licensee shall not reverse assemble, reverse compile, or in any way reverse engineer

Page 48 - 2-16 115976-A Rev. A

Using the Bay Command Console2-8 115976-A Rev. AMoving Back to Root ContextTo move back from your current working context to root (box) context, enter

Page 49

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-9Moving Back One or More LevelsTo move from your current working context to the previous context (c

Page 50 - Displaying Configuration Data

Using the Bay Command Console2-10 115976-A Rev. AFigure 2-4. Moving Forward One LevelThis is equivalent to changing directories in a UNIX file system.S

Page 51

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-11Figure 2-5. Specifying an Absolute PathSpecifying a Shortened Path DescriptionThe BCC system can

Page 52 - Example 1: (show config)

Using the Bay Command Console2-12 115976-A Rev. AFigure 2-6. Allowing the BCC to Search for a Context You SpecifyDisplaying Online HelpEnter the help

Page 53 - Example 2: (lso)

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-13Getting Root-Level (System) HelpAfter entering help at the root-level (bcc>) prompt, you obtai

Page 54

Using the Bay Command Console2-14 115976-A Rev. AExample:This is the root-level BCC help screen for a BN router.### NOTE: Config commands make realtim

Page 55 - <filename>

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-15To return to this help screen at any time, enter:> cwc> helpGetting Help for Configurable Ob

Page 56 - Entering Commands

Using the Bay Command Console2-16 115976-A Rev. AGetting Help for Configurable Attribute ValuesBefore modifying the value of an attribute, you can view

Page 57

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-17Displaying Assigned Attribute ValuesTo view currently assigned values for attributes of the curre

Page 58

115976-A Rev. A v Contents About This Guide Audience ...

Page 59 - System Commands

Using the Bay Command Console2-18 115976-A Rev. ASubprotocols -- Just as a directory can contain files in a file system, an object in the BCC configurati

Page 60 - Technician Interface Scripts

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-19Examplebcc> ethernet slot 2 connector 1ethernet/2/1> ip address 1.2.3.4ip/1.2.3.4> ripr

Page 61 - Configuration Commands

Using the Bay Command Console2-20 115976-A Rev. A ethernet slot 2 connector 1 state enabled circuit-name E21 ip address 1.2.3.4

Page 62 - <value>

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-21bcc> ethernet slot 2 connector 1ethernet/2/1> ip address 1.2.3.4ip/1.2.3.4> show confi

Page 63

Using the Bay Command Console2-22 115976-A Rev. ADisplaying Binary Configuration Files as BCC SyntaxAfter booting the device from a binary configuration

Page 64

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-23 board type 5120 slot 8 board-type atmcds3 cwc .. board type 4098 slot 9 board-type

Page 65 - ] pair per command

Using the Bay Command Console2-24 115976-A Rev. AThis command saves the current device configuration as a bootable binary file, at the location you spec

Page 66 - Command Operators

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-25Recalling CommandsThe BCC supports a configurable command history buffer or list, from which you c

Page 67

Using the Bay Command Console2-26 115976-A Rev. ASyntax for the source command is as follows:bcc> source <volume>:<filename>Entering Mu

Page 68

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-27Example: bcc> board slot 1 type 162 ;# 199.221.47.129 199.221.47.21If you source an ASCII-fo

Page 69 - Editing Commands

vi 115976-A Rev. A Chapter 2Learning to Use the BCC Interface Entering and Exiting the BCC Interface ...

Page 70

Using the Bay Command Console2-28 115976-A Rev. Ahelp Displays system commands, operations, configurable objects (interfaces and protocols), attribute

Page 71 - Configuring a Network Device

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-29Configuration CommandsThis section describes how the BCC allows you to enter commands using any th

Page 72

Using the Bay Command Console2-30 115976-A Rev. AThe keyword new tells the BCC that you are adding a new object to the device configuration. The keywo

Page 73 - Creating a New Configuration

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-31With default syntax, the BCC expects the values for required attributes of ethernet to occur in a

Page 74 - Example Configuration Problem:

Using the Bay Command Console2-32 115976-A Rev. AUsing Abbreviated SyntaxYou can abbreviate BCC commands in the following manner:bcc> e 2/1is the s

Page 75 - Configuring a Network Device

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-33Required and Optional AttributesYou must specify a value for•Any [<attribute-name> <valu

Page 76

Using the Bay Command Console2-34 115976-A Rev. ACommand OperatorsCommand operators perform a named operation within the current or specified configurat

Page 77

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-35disableExplicit Allows you to change the administrative state of a configured object from “enable

Page 78

Using the Bay Command Console2-36 115976-A Rev. AhelpExplicit Displays descriptions of commands, attributes, and attribute values. BCC help responses

Page 79

Learning to Use the BCC Interface115976-A Rev. A 2-37Editing CommandsYou can edit BCC command lines using the following keystrokes:Editing Function Ke

Page 80

115976-A Rev. A viiConfiguration Commands ...2-29Using Basic (Full

Page 82 - <object name>

115976-A Rev. A 3-1Chapter 3Configuring a Network DeviceThis chapter describes how to use BCC commands to • Create a new configuration.• Modify an exist

Page 83

Using the Bay Command Console3-2 115976-A Rev. AExample:To configure an Ethernet interface on slot 2, connector 1, of a BLN router, enter at the comma

Page 84

Configuring a Network Device115976-A Rev. A 3-3Creating a New ConfigurationYou configure a Bay Networks device by defining a set of objects that collecti

Page 85 - Enabling a Configured Object

Using the Bay Command Console3-4 115976-A Rev. AFigure 3-1. Comparing BCC Configuration to OSI Protocol LayeringExample Configuration Problem:Add the fo

Page 86 - Deleting a Configured Object

Configuring a Network Device115976-A Rev. A 3-5Figure 3-2. Example BCC Configurationip(global)ospf(global)boxarp(global)ethernet/2/1ip address 1.2.3.4o

Page 87

Using the Bay Command Console3-6 115976-A Rev. AApplying the file system analogy to this example:• The object named box is like a root-level directory

Page 88

Configuring a Network Device115976-A Rev. A 3-7To build this sample configuration, log in to the Technician Interface and1. Enter bcc-trial at the prom

Page 89 - Chapter 4

Using the Bay Command Console3-8 115976-A Rev. AThis moves BCC into the configuration context for connector 1 of the ethernet interface on slot 2. The

Page 90 - 4-2 115976-A Rev. A

Configuring a Network Device115976-A Rev. A 3-9 transmit-queue-length: Number of transmit buffers dedicated to the chip.Protocols: ip5. You need to

Page 92 - 4-4 115976-A Rev. A

Using the Bay Command Console3-10 115976-A Rev. A7. From the context of ip/1.2.3.4, enter the following command to determine the REQUIRED attributes o

Page 93

Configuring a Network Device115976-A Rev. A 3-11 hello-interval 10 dead-interval 40 poll-interval 120 metric 1 mtu 110. Try to change the value o

Page 94 - commands.)

Using the Bay Command Console3-12 115976-A Rev. A14. Save the configuration.ospf/1.2.3.4> tic save config <volume>:<filename> This comma

Page 95

Configuring a Network Device115976-A Rev. A 3-13Modifying an Existing ConfigurationThis section describes by example how to modify an existing device c

Page 96 - 4-8 115976-A Rev. A

Using the Bay Command Console3-14 115976-A Rev. A6. As an optional step, check the values currently assigned to all attributes of OSPF on ethernet/2/1

Page 97

Configuring a Network Device115976-A Rev. A 3-15Disabling a Configured ObjectIn most cases, the BCC automatically enables objects that you add to the d

Page 98 - Configuring OSPF and BGP

Using the Bay Command Console3-16 115976-A Rev. A3. Verify RIP.rip/1.2.3.4> info stateenabledrip/1.2.3.4>Deleting a Configured ObjectBecause of

Page 99

Configuring a Network Device115976-A Rev. A 3-17Configuration Command ResponsesThe BCC configuration system completes the configuration task you entered

Page 101 - Examples

115976-A Rev. A 4-1Chapter 4ExamplesThis chapter contains examples of BCC command sequences that• Identify link modules residing in a device. • Configu

Page 102 - 4-14 115976-A Rev. A

115976-A Rev. A ix Figures Figure 1-1. The Technician Interface and the BCC Interface ...1-1Figure 2-1. Example BC

Page 103

Using the Bay Command Console4-2 115976-A Rev. AIdentifying Link Modules Residing in a DeviceBefore you begin configuring a device, you can check the c

Page 104 - 4-16 115976-A Rev. A

Examples115976-A Rev. A 4-3Configuring an Ethernet Interface with IP, ARP, and RIPYou can configure (add/customize) a physical interface and add protoco

Page 105

Using the Bay Command Console4-4 115976-A Rev. AConfiguring a HSSI Port with IPTo configure a HSSI port with IP, you must also specify a WAN protocol su

Page 106 - 4-18 115976-A Rev. A

Examples115976-A Rev. A 4-5 bofl-timeout 1 mtu 4608 media dsthree external-clock-speed 46359642 crc-size crc32bit internal-clock-test disabled b

Page 107

Using the Bay Command Console4-6 115976-A Rev. AConfiguring a Token Ring Interface with IP and RIPYou can configure IP and RIP on a token ring interface

Page 108

Examples115976-A Rev. A 4-7Configuring PPP, IP, and an Adjacent Host (Sync Interface)This example configures PPP and IP on a synchronous interface, and

Page 109 - 115976-A Rev. A Index-1

Using the Bay Command Console4-8 115976-A Rev. AConfiguring a FDDI Interface with IP and RIPThis example includes an attempt to change the address assi

Page 110 - 115976-A Rev. A

Examples115976-A Rev. A 4-9 listen enable default-supply disable default-listen disable mode poisoned time-to-live 1 version rip1 authenticatio

Page 111 - 115976-A Rev. A Index-3

Using the Bay Command Console4-10 115976-A Rev. AConfiguring OSPF and BGPThis example shows how to• Add two OSPF areas• Add OSPF to interfaces configure

Page 112

Examples115976-A Rev. A 4-11 holddown: Max seconds between running djikstra algorithm. log-mask: Log level for OSPF log messages. max-equal-path: M

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