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This section describes the function and displays the syntax of each AppleTalk command. For more information about defaults and usage guidelines, see the corresponding chapter of the Router Products Command Reference publication.
access-list access-list-number {deny | permit} additional-zones
To define the default action to take for access checks that apply to zones, use the access-list additional-zones global configuration command. The default is to deny other access.
access-list-number | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 600 to 699. |
deny | Denies access if the conditions are matched. |
permit | Permits access if the conditions are matched. |
access-list access-list-number {deny | permit} cable-range
cable-range
no access-list [access-list-number {deny | permit} cable-range
cable-range]
To define an AppleTalk access list for a cable range (for extended networks only), use the access-list cable-range global configuration command. To remove an access list, use the no form of this command.
access-list-number | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 600 to 699. |
deny | Denies access if the conditions are matched. |
permit | Permits access if the conditions are matched. |
cable-range | Cable range value. The argument specifies the start and end of the cable range, separated by a hyphen. These values are decimal numbers from 1 to 65279. The starting network number must be less than or equal to the ending network number. |
access-list access-list-number {deny | permit} includes
cable-range
no access-list access-list-number [{deny | permit} includes
cable-range]
To define an AppleTalk access list that overlaps any part of a range of network numbers or cable ranges (for both extended and nonextended networks), use the access-list includes global configuration command. To remove an access list, use the no form of this command.
access-list-number | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 600 to 699. |
deny | Denies access if the conditions are matched. |
permit | Permits access if the conditions are matched. |
cable-range | Cable range or network number. The argument specifies the start and end of the cable range, separated by a hyphen. These values are decimal numbers from 1 to 65279. The starting network number must be less than or equal to the ending network number. To specify a network number, set the starting and ending network numbers to the same value. |
access-list access-list-number {deny | permit} network network
no access-list access-list-number [{deny | permit} network network]
To define an AppleTalk access list for a single network number (that is, for a nonextended network), use the access-list network global configuration command. To remove an access list, use the no form of this command.
access-list-number | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 600 to 699. |
deny | Denies access if the conditions are matched. |
permit | Permits access if the conditions are matched. |
network | AppleTalk network number. |
access-list access-list-number {deny | permit} other-access
no access-list access-list-number
To define the default action to take for access checks that apply to networks or cable ranges, use the access-list other-access global configuration command.
access-list-number | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 600 to 699. |
deny | Denies access if the conditions are matched. |
permit | Permits access if the conditions are matched. |
access-list access-list-number {deny | permit} within cable-range
no access-list access-list-number [{deny | permit} within cable-range]
To define an AppleTalk access list for an extended or a nonextended network whose network number or cable range is included entirely within the specified cable range, use the access-list within global configuration command. To remove this access list, use the no form of this command.
access-list-number | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 600 to 699. |
deny | Denies access if the conditions are matched. |
permit | Permits access if the conditions are matched. |
cable-range | Cable range or network number. The argument specifies the start and end of the cable range, separated by a hyphen. These arguments are decimal numbers from 1 to 65279. The starting network number must be less than or equal to the ending network number. To specify a network number, set the starting and ending network numbers to the same value. |
access-list access-list-number {deny | permit} zone zone-name
no access-list access-list-number [{deny | permit} zone zone-name]
To define an AppleTalk access list that applies to a zone, use the access-list zone global configuration command. To remove an access list, use the no form of this command.
access-list number | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 600 to 699. |
deny192 | Denies access if the conditions are matched. |
permit | Permits access if the conditions are matched. |
zone-name | Name of the zone. The name can include special characters from the Apple Macintosh character set. To include a special character, type a colon followed by two hexadecimal characters. For zone names with a leading space character, enter the first character as the special sequence :20. |
appletalk access-group access-list-number
no appletalk access-group [access-list-number]
To assign an access list to an interface, use the appletalk access-group interface configuration command. To remove the access list use the no form of this command.
access-list-number | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 600 to 699. |
appletalk address network.node
no appletalk address [network.node]
To enable nonextended AppleTalk routing on an interface, use the appletalk address interface configuration command. To disable nonextended AppleTalk routing, use the no form of this command.
network.node | AppleTalk network address assigned to the interface. The argument network is the 16-bit network number in the range 0 to 65279. The argument node is the 8-bit node number in the range 0 to 254. Both numbers are decimal. |
[no] appletalk alternate-addressing
To display network numbers in a two-octet format, use the appletalk alternate-addressing global configuration command. To return to displaying network numbers in the format network.node, use the no form of this command.
[no] appletalk arp [probe | request] interval interval
To specify the time interval between the retransmission of ARP packets, use the appletalk arp interval global configuration command. To restore both default intervals, use the no form of this command.
probe | (Optional) Indicates that the interval specified is to be used with AARP requests that are trying to determined the address of the local router when the router is being configured. If you omit probe and request, probe is the default. |
request | (Optional) Indicates that the interval specified is to be used when AARP is attempting to determine the hardware address of another node so that AARP can deliver a packet. |
interval | Interval, in milliseconds, between AppleTalk ARP transmissions. The minimum value is 33 milliseconds. The default intervals are: probe--200 milliseconds, request--1000 milliseconds |
[no] appletalk arp [probe | request] retransmit-count number
To specify the number of AppleTalk ARP (AARP) probe or request transmissions, use the appletalk arp retransmit-count global configuration command. To restore both default values, use the no form of this command.
probe | (Optional) Indicates that the number specified is to be used with AARP requests that are trying to determine the address of the local router when the router is being configured. If you omit probe and request, probe is the default. |
request | (Optional) Indicates that the number specified is to be used when AARP is attempting to determine the hardware address of another node so that AARP can deliver a packet. |
number | Number of AARP retransmissions that will occur. The minimum number is 1. With the probe keyword, the default value is 10 retransmissions. With the request keyword, the default value is 5 retransmissions. Specifying 0 selects the default value. The default intervals are: probe--10; request--5. |
[no] appletalk arp-timeout interval
Use the appletalk arp-timeout interface configuration command to specify the interval at which entries are aged out of the ARP table. To return to the default timeout, use the no form of this command.
interval | Time, in minutes, after which an entry is removed from the AppleTalk ARP table. The default is 240 minutes, or 4 hours. |
[no] appletalk cable-range cable-range [network.node]
Use the appletalk cable-range interface configuration command to enable an extended AppleTalk network. To disable an extended AppleTalk network, use the no form of this command.
cable-range | Cable range value. The argument specifies the start and end of the cable range, separated by a hyphen. These arguments are decimal number from 0 to 65279. The starting network number must be less than or equal to the ending network number. |
network.node | (Optional) Suggested AppleTalk address for the interface. The argument network is the 16-bit network number, and the argument node is the 8-bit node number. Both numbers are decimal. The suggested network number must fall within the specified range of network numbers. |
To enable the generation and verification of checksums for all AppleTalk packets (except routed packets), use the appletalk checksum global configuration command. To disable checksum generation and verification, use the no form of this command.
To place an interface into discovery mode, use the appletalk discovery interface configuration command. To disable discovery mode, use the no form of this command.
appletalk distribute-list access-list-number in
no appletalk distribute-list [access-list-number in]
To filter routing updates received from other routers over a specified interface, use the appletalk distribute-list in interface configuration command. To remove the routing table update filter, use the no form of this command.
access-list-number | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 600 to 699. |
in | Indicates that the filter applies to updates received by the router. |
appletalk distribute-list access-list-number out
no appletalk distribute-list [access-list-number out]
To filter routing updates transmitted to other routers, use the appletalk distribute-list out interface configuration command. To remove the routing table update filter, use the no form of this command.
access-list-number | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 600 to 699. |
out | Indicates that the filter applies to updates transmitted by the router. |
To log significant network events, use the appletalk event-logging global configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command.
[no] appletalk free-trade-zone
To establish a free-trade zone, use the appletalk free-trade-zone interface configuration command. To disable a free-trade zone, use the no form of this command.
appletalk getzonelist-filter access-list-number
no appletalk getzonelist-filter [access-list-number]
To filter GetZoneList (GZL) replies, use the appletalk getzonelist-filter interface configuration command. To remove this filter, use the no form of this command.
access-list-number | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 600 to 699. |
To derive AARP table entries from incoming packets (on AppleTalk Phase 1 networks only), use the appletalk glean-packets interface configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command.
[no] appletalk ignore-verify-errors
To allow a router to start functioning even if the network is misconfigured, use the appletalk ignore-verify-errors global configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command.
appletalk iptalk network.node zone
no appletalk iptalk [network.node zone]
To enable IPTalk encapsulation on an interface that already has a configured IP address, use the appletalk iptalk interface configuration command. To disable IPTalk encapsulation, use the no form of this command.
network.node | AppleTalk network address assigned to the interface. The argument network is the 16-bit network number, and the argument node is the 8-bit node number. Both numbers are decimal. |
zone | Name of the zone for the connected AppleTalk network. |
appletalk iptalk-baseport port-number
no appletalk iptalk-baseport [port-number]
To specify the UDP port number when configuring IPTalk, use the appletalk iptalk-baseport global configuration command. To return to the default UDP port number, use the no form of this command.
port-number | First UDP port number in the range of UDP ports used in mapping AppleTalk well-known DDP socket numbers to UDP ports. The default is 768. |
appletalk lookup-type service-type
no appletalk lookup-type [service-type]
Use the appletalk lookup-type global configuration command to specify which NBP service types are retained in the name cache. To disable the caching of services, use the no form of this command.
service-type | AppleTalk service types. The name of a service type can include special characters from the Apple Macintosh character set. To include a special character, type a colon followed by two hexadecimal numbers. For zone names with a leading space character, enter the first character as the special sequence :20. For a list of possible types, see the AppleTalk service types table in the Router Products Command Reference publication. The default is to retain ciscoRouter entries in name cache. |
appletalk macip dynamic ip-address {ip-address | zone
server-zone}
no appletalk macip [dynamic ip-address [ip-address] zone
server-zone]
Use the appletalk macip dynamic global configuration command to allocate IP addresses to dynamic MacIP clients. To delete a MacIP dynamic address assignment, use the no form of this command.
ip-address | IP address, in four-part dotted decimal notation. To specify a range, enter two IP addresses, which represent the first and last addresses in the range. |
zone server-zone | Zone in which the MacIP server resides. The argument server-zone can include special characters from the Apple Macintosh character set. To include a special character, specify a colon followed by two hexadecimal characters. For zone names with a leading space character, enter the first character as the special sequence :20. For a list of Macintosh characters, refer to the Apple Computer, Inc. specification Inside AppleTalk. |
appletalk macip server ip-address zone server-zone
no appletalk macip [server ip-address zone server-zone]
Use the appletalk macip server global configuration command to establish a MacIP server for a zone. To shut down a MACIP server, use the no form of this command.
ip-address | IP address, in four-part dotted decimal notation. It is suggested that this address match the address of an existing IP interface. |
zone server-zone | Zone in which the MacIP server resides. The argument server-zone can include special characters from the Apple Macintosh character set. To include a special character, specify a colon followed by two hexadecimal characters. For zone names with a leading space character, enter the first character as the special sequence :20. For a list of Macintosh characters, refer to the Apple Computer, Inc. specification Inside AppleTalk. |
appletalk macip static ip-address {ip-address | zone server-zone}
no appletalk macip [static ip-address [ip-address] zone server-zone]
Use the appletalk macip static global configuration command to allocate an IP address to be used by a MacIP client that has reserved a static IP address. To delete a MacIP static address assignment, use the no form of this command.
ip-address | IP address, in four-part dotted decimal format. To specify a range, enter two IP addresses, which represent the first and last addresses in the range. |
zone server-zone | Zone in which the MacIP server resides. The argument server-zone can include special characters from the Apple Macintosh character set. To include a special character, specify a colon followed by two hexadecimal characters. For zone names with a leading space character, enter the first character as the special sequence :20. For a list of Macintosh characters, refer to Apple Computer, Inc. specification Inside AppleTalk. |
appletalk name-lookup-interval seconds
no appletalk name-lookup-interval [seconds]
To set the interval between service pollings by the router on its AppleTalk interfaces, use the appletalk name-lookup-interval global configuration command. To purge the name cache and return to the default polling interval, use the no form of this command.
seconds | Interval, in seconds, between NBP lookup pollings. This can be any positive integer; there is no upper limit. It is recommended that you use an interval between 300 seconds (5 minutes) and 1200 seconds (20 minutes). The smaller the interval, the more packets are generated to handle the names. Specifying an interval of 0 purges all entries from the name cache and disables the caching of service type information that is controlled by the appletalk lookup-type command, including the caching of information about our routers. The default is 0 seconds. |
[no] appletalk permit-partial-zones
To permit access to the other networks in a zone when access to one of those networks is denied, use the appletalk permit-partial-zones global command. To return to the default behavior, which is to deny access to all networks in a zone if access to one of those networks is denied, use the no form of this command.
To enable the recognition of pre-FDDITalk packets, use the appletalk pre-fdditalk global configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command.
appletalk proxy-nbp network-number zone-name
no appletalk proxy-nbp [network-number zone-name]
To assign a proxy network number for each zone in which there is a router that supports only nonextended AppleTalk, use the appletalk proxy-nbp global configuration command. To delete the proxy, use the no form of this command.
network-number | Network number of the proxy. It is a 16-bit decimal number and must be unique on the network. This is the network number that will be advertised by the router as if it were a real network number. |
zone-name | Name of the zone that contains the routers that support only nonextended AppleTalk. The name can include special characters from the Apple Macintosh character set. To include a special character, type a colon followed by two hexadecimal characters. For zone names with a leading space character, enter the first character as the special sequence :20. |
[no] appletalk require-route-zones
To prevent the advertisement of routes (network numbers or cable ranges) that have no assigned zone, use the appletalk require-route-zones global configuration command. To disable this option and allow the router to advertise to its neighbors routes that have no network-zone association, use the no form of this command.
To enable fast switching on all supported interfaces, use the appletalk route-cache interface configuration command. To disable fast switching, use the no form of this command. By default, enabled on all interfaces that support fast switching.
To enable AppleTalk routing, use the appletalk routing global configuration command. To disable AppleTalk routing, use the no form of this command. By default, disabled.
To allow a router to send routing updates to its neighbors, use the appletalk send-rtmps interface configuration command. To block updates from being sent, use the no form of this command. The default is to send routing updates.
appletalk static cable-range cable-range to network.node zone
zone-name
no appletalk static cable-range cable-range to network.node
[zone zone-name]
To define a static route on an extended network, use the appletalk static cable global configuration command. To remove a static route, use the no form of this command. By default, no static routes are defined.
cable-range | Cable range value. The argument specifies the start and end of the cable range, separated by a hyphen. These values are decimal numbers from 1 to 65279. The starting network number must be less than or equal to the ending network number. |
network.node | AppleTalk network address of the remote router. The argument network is the 16-bit network number in the range 0 to 65279. The argument node is the 8-bit node number in the range 0 to 254. Both numbers are decimal. |
zone-name | Name of the zone on the remote network. The name can include special characters from the Apple Macintosh character set. To include a special character, type a colon followed by two hexadecimal characters. For zone names with a leading space character, enter the first character as the special sequence :20. |
[no] appletalk static network network-number to network.node [zone
zone-name]
To define a static route on a nonextended network, use the appletalk static network global configuration command. To remove a static route, use the no form of this command.
network-number | AppleTalk network number assigned to the interface. It is a 16-bit decimal number and must be unique on the network. This is the network number that will be advertised by the router as if it were a real network number. |
network.node | AppleTalk network address of the remote router. The argument network is the 16-bit network number in the range 0 to 65279. The argument node is the 8-bit node number in the range 0 to 254. Both numbers are decimal. |
zone-name | Name of the zone on the remote network. The name can include special characters from the Apple Macintosh character set. To include a special character, type a colon followed by two hexadecimal characters. For zone names with a leading space character, enter the first character as the special sequence :20. |
[no] appletalk strict-rtmp-checking
To perform maximum checking of routing updates to ensure their validity, use the appletalk strict-rtmp-checking global configuration command. To disable the maximum checking, use the no form of this command. The default is to provide maximum checking.
appletalk timers update-interval valid-interval invalid-interval
no appletalk timers [update-interval valid-interval invalid-interval]
To change the routing update timers, use the appletalk timers global configuration command. To return to the default routing update timers, use the no form of this command.
update-interval | Time, in seconds, between routing updates sent to other routers on the network. The default is 10 seconds. |
valid-interval | Time, in seconds, that the router will consider a route valid without having heard a routing update for that route. The default is 20 seconds (two times the update interval). |
invalid-interval | Time, in seconds, that the route is retained after the last update. The default is 60 seconds (three times the valid interval). |
appletalk zip-query-interval interval
no zip-query-interval [interval]
To specify the interval at which the router sends ZIP queries, use the appletalk zip-query-interval global configuration command. To return to the default interval, use the no form of this command.
interval | Interval, in seconds, at which the router sends ZIP queries. It can be any positive integer. The default is 10 seconds. |
appletalk zone zone-name
no appletalk zone [zone-name]
To set the zone name for the connected AppleTalk network, use the appletalk zone interface configuration command. To delete a zone, use the no form of this command.
zone-name | Name of the zone. The name can include special characters from the Apple Macintosh character set. To include a special character, type a colon followed by two hexadecimal characters. For zone names with a leading space character, enter the first character as the special sequence :20. |
clear appletalk arp [network.node]
To delete all entries or a specified entry from the AppleTalk ARP (AARP) table, use the clear appletalk arp EXEC command. If no network node is specified, this command deletes all entries from the table.
network.node | (Optional) Specific AppleTalk network address to be deleted from the router's AARP table. The argument network is the 16-bit network number in the range 0 to 65279. The argument node is the 8-bit node number in the range 0 to 254. Both numbers are decimal. |
clear appletalk neighbor [neighbor-address]
To delete all entries or a specified entry from the neighbor table, use the clear appletalk neighbor EXEC command. If no neighbor address is specified, this command deletes all entries from the table.
neighbor-address | (Optional) Network address of the specific neighboring router to be deleted from the neighbor table. The address is in the format network.node. The argument network is the 16-bit network number in the range 1 to 65279. The argument node is the 8-bit node number in the range 0 to 254. Both numbers are decimal. |
clear appletalk route [network]
To delete all entries or a specified entry from the routing table, use the clear appletalk route EXEC command. If no network is specified, this command deletes all entries from the table
network | (Optional) Number of the specific network the route is to. |
To reset AppleTalk traffic counters, use the clear appletalk traffic EXEC command.
To check host reachability and network connectivity, use the ping user EXEC command.
appletalk | Specifies the AppleTalk protocol. |
network.node | AppleTalk address of the system to ping. |
ping [appletalk] [network.node]
To check host reachability and network connectivity, use the ping privileged EXEC command.
appletalk | (Optional) Specifies the AppleTalk protocol. |
network.node | (Optional) AppleTalk address of the system to ping. |
To display the AppleTalk access lists currently defined, use the show appletalk access-lists user EXEC command.
show appletalk adjacent-routes
To display routes to networks that are directly connected or that are one hop away, use the show appletalk adjacent-routes privileged EXEC command.
To display the entries in the AppleTalk ARP (AARP) cache, use the show appletalk arp privileged EXEC command.
To display the routes in the AppleTalk fast-switching table on an extended AppleTalk network, use the show appletalk cache user EXEC command.
To display information and settings about the router's AppleTalk internetwork and other parameters, use the show appletalk globals privileged EXEC command.
show appletalk interface [brief] [type unit]
To display the status of the AppleTalk interfaces configured in the router and the parameters configured on each interface, use the show appletalk interface privileged EXEC command.
brief | (Optional) Displays a brief summary of the status of the AppleTalk interfaces. |
type | (Optional) Interface type identifier. One of the following: asynchronous, dialer, Ethernet (IEEE 802.3), Token Ring (IEEE 802.5), FDDI, High Speed Serial Interface, Virtual Interface, ISDN Basic Rate Interface, ATM interface, loopback, null, or serial. |
unit | Interface number. |
To display status information about all known MacIP clients, use the show appletalk macip-clients privileged EXEC command.
To display status information about a router's servers, use the show appletalk macip-servers privileged EXEC command.
To display statistics about MacIP traffic through the router, use the show appletalk macip-traffic privileged EXEC command.
To display a list of NBP services offered by nearby routers and other devices that support NBP, use the show appletalk name-cache privileged EXEC command.
To display the contents of the NBP name registration table, use the show appletalk nbp privileged EXEC command.
show appletalk neighbors [neighbor-address]
To display information about a specified AppleTalk router or all AppleTalk routers that are directly connected to any of the networks to which this router is directly connected, use the show appletalk neighbors privileged EXEC command. If no neighbor address is specified, this command displays information about all AppleTalk routers.
neighbor-address | (Optional) Displays information about the specified neighbor router. |
show appletalk route [network | unit type]
To display the entries in the AppleTalk routing table, use the show appletalk route privileged EXEC command. If no network or unit type is specified, this command displays all entries in the routing table.
network | (Optional) Displays the routing table entry for the specified network. |
unit type | (Optional) Displays the routing table entries for networks that can be reached via the specified interface. |
show appletalk sockets [socket-number]
To display information about process-level operation in the sockets of an AppleTalk interface, use the show appletalk sockets privileged EXEC command. If no socket number is specified, this command displays information about all sockets.
socket-number | (Optional) Displays information about the specified socket number. |
To display information the statically defined routes, use the show appletalk static privileged EXEC command.
To display statistics about AppleTalk traffic, including MacIP traffic, use the show appletalk traffic privileged EXEC command.
show appletalk zone [zone-name]
To display the entries in the zone information table, use the show appletalk zone privileged EXEC command. If no zone name is specified, the command displays all entries in the zone information table.
zone-name | (Optional) Displays the entry for the specified zone. |
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