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Table of Contents

Banyan VINES Commands

Banyan VINES Commands

This chapter describes the function and displays the syntax of each Banyan VINES command. For more information about defaults and usage guidelines, see the corresponding chapter of the Router Products Command Reference publication.

clear vines cache [interface interface | neighbor address |
server network]

To delete entries from the VINES fast-switching cache, use the clear vines cache EXEC command. If you do not specify any keywords or arguments, all entries in the fast-switch cache are deleted.

interface interface (Optional) Deletes from the fast-switching cache table any entry that has one or more paths that go through the specified interface.
neighbor address (Optional) Deletes from the fast-switching cache table any entry that has one or more paths via the specified neighbor router.
server network (Optional) Deletes from the fast-switching cache table any entry whose network number part of the destination address matches the specified network address.The argument network can be either a 4-byte hexadecimal number or a 4-byte decimal number (if you have issued a vines decimal command).

clear vines ipc number

To delete VINES IPC connection blocks from the router, use the clear vines ipc EXEC command.

number Hexadecimal number of the IPC connection to delete

clear vines neighbor {network | *}

To delete entries from the neighbor table, use the clear vines neighbor EXEC command.

network Network number of the neighbor whose entry should be deleted from the neighbor table. The argument network can be either a 4-byte hexadecimal number or a 4-byte decimal number (if you have issued a vines decimal command).
* Deletes all entries from the neighbor path table except the entry for the local router.

clear vines route {network | *}

To delete network addresses from the routing table, use the clear vines route EXEC command.

network Network number of the entry to delete from the routing table. The argument network can be either a 4-byte hexadecimal number, a 4-byte decimal number (if you have issued a vines decimal command), or a host name (if you have issued a vines host command).
* Deletes all entries from the routing table.

clear vines traffic

To clear all VINES-related statistics that are displayed by the show vines traffic command, use the clear vines traffic EXEC command.

ping [vines] [address]

To determine basic network connectivity, use the ping EXEC command.

vines (Optional) Specifies the VINES protocol. If you omit this keyword, the router prompts for it.
address (Optional) Address of system to ping. If you omit the address, the router prompts for it.

show vines access [access-list-number]

To display the VINES access lists currently defined, use the show vines access EXEC command. If no access list number is specified, all access lists are displayed.

access-list-number (Optional) Number of the access list to display.

show vines cache [address | interface type number | neighbor address |
server network]

To display the contents of the VINES fast-switching cache, use the show vines cache EXEC command. If no keywords or arguments are specified, all entries in the fast-switching cache are displayed.

address (Optional) Displays the entry in the fast-switching cache for the specified station.
interface type number (Optional) Displays all neighbors in the fast-switching cache that are accessible via the specified interface type and number.
neighbor address (Optional) Displays all routes in the VINES fast-switching cache that have the specified neighbor as their first hop. address is a 6-byte hexadecimal number in the format network:host, where network is 4 bytes and host is 2 bytes, a 4-byte decimal number in the same format (if you have issued a vines decimal command), or a host name (if you have issued a vines host command).
server network (Optional) Displays all entries in the VINES fast-switching cache that are in the specified logical network. network can be either a 4-byte hexadecimal number or a 4-byte decimal number (if you have issued a vines decimal command).

show vines host [name]

To display the entries in the VINES host name table, use the show vines host EXEC command. If no name is specified, all entries in the host name table are displayed.

name (Optional) Displays the entry in the VINES name table that has the specified name.

show vines interface [type number]

To display status of the VINES interfaces configured in the router and the parameters configured on each interface, use the show vines interface EXEC command. If no interface is specified, values for all interfaces are displayed.

type (Optional) Interface type
number (Optional) Interface number

show vines ipc

To display information about any currently active IPC connections, use the show vines ipc EXEC command.

show vines neighbor [address | interface type number | server number]

To display the entries in the VINES neighbor table, use the show vines neighbor EXEC command. If no keywords or arguments are specified, all entries in the neighbor table are displayed.

address (Optional) Displays the entry for the specified neighbor.
interface type number (Optional) Displays all neighbor paths in the neighbor table that use the specified interface.
server number (Optional) Displays all entries in the neighbor table that have the specified network number.

show vines route [number | neighbor address]

To display the contents of the VINES routing table, use the show vines route EXEC command. If no keywords or arguments are specified, all entries in the routing table are displayed.

number (Optional) Displays the routing table entry for the specified network.
neighbor address (Optional) Displays all routes in the VINES routing table that have the specified neighbor as their first hop.

show vines service [fs | nsm | ss | vs]

To display information about the router's current time, use the show vines service EXEC command.

fs (Optional) Displays file service information.
nsm (Optional) Displays network and system management service information.
ss (Optional) Displays server service information.
vs (Optional) Displays security service information.

show vines traffic [type number]

To display the statistics maintained about VINES protocol traffic, use the show vines traffic EXEC command. If no interface is specified, values for all interfaces are displayed.

type number (Optional) Displays values for a specific interface.

trace [vines | oldvines] [address]

To determine the path that a packet takes when traversing a VINES network, use the trace EXEC command.

vines (Optional) Specifies the VINES protocol. If you omit this keyword, the router prompts for it.
oldvines (Optional) Specifies the VINES protocol. This trace is compatible with our trace function prior to IOS Release 10.2.
address (Optional) Address of a node. This is a 6-byte hexadecimal number in the format network:host, where network is 4 bytes and host is 2 bytes.

[no] vines access-group access-list-number

To apply an access list to an interface, use the vines 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. All outgoing packets defined with either standard or extended access lists and forwarded through the interface are filtered by the entries in this access list. For standard access lists, access-list-number is a decimal number from 1 to 100. For extended access lists, access-list-number is a decimal number from 101 to 200.

vines access-list access-list-number {deny | permit} protocol
source-address source-mask [source-port] destination-address
destination-mask
[destination-port]
no vines access-list access-list-number

To specify a standard VINES access list, use this version of the vines access-list global 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 1 to 100.
deny Denies access if the conditions are matched.
permit Allows access if the conditions are matched.
protocol VINES protocol ID number or name. It can be a value from 1 to 255 or one of the following protocol keywords:

· ARP--Address Resolution Protocol

· ICP--Internet Control Protocol

· IP--VINES Internet Protocol

· IPC--Interprocess Communications

· RTP--Routing Update Protocol

· SPP--Sequence Packets Protocol

source-address Address of the network from which the packet is being sent. This is a 6-byte hexadecimal number in the format network:host, where network is 4 bytes and host is 2 bytes.
source-mask Mask to be applied to source-address. This is a 6-byte hexadecimal value. Place ones in the bit positions you want to mask. These bits correspond to the bit in the address that should be ignored.
source-port (Optional) Number of the local port from which the packet is being sent. This argument is required when the protocol specified is IPC or SPP, and is not accepted when any other protocol is specified. It can be a number from 0x0000 through 0xFFFF. Well-known local port numbers have values from 0x0001 through 0x01FF. Transient local port numbers have values from 0x0200 through 0xFFFE. Refer to the IPC port number table in the Router Products Command Reference publication for a list of some IPC port numbers.
destination-address Address of the network to which the packet is being sent. This is a 6-byte hexadecimal number in the format network:host, where network is 4 bytes and host is 2 bytes.
destination-mask Mask to be applied to destination-address. This is a 6-byte hexadecimal value. Place ones in the bit positions you want to mask. These bits correspond to the bits in the address that should be ignored.
destination-port (Optional) Number of the local port to which the packet is being sent. This argument is required when the protocol specified is IPC or SPP, and is not accepted when any other protocol is specified. It can be a number from 0x0000 through 0xFFFF. Well-known local port numbers have values from 0x0001 through 0x01FF. Transient local port numbers have values from 0x0200 through 0xFFFE. Refer to the IPC port number table in the Router Products Command Reference publication for a list of some IPC port numbers.

vines access-list access-list-number {deny | permit} protocol
source-address source-mask [source-port source-port-mask]
destination-address destination-mask [destination-port
destination-port-mask
]
no vines access-list access-list-number

To create an extended VINES access list, use this version of the vines access-list global configuration command. To remove an extended access list, use the no form of this command.

access-list-number Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 101 to 200.
deny Denies access if the conditions are matched.
permit Allows access if the conditions are matched.
protocol VINES protocol ID number or name. The number can be a value from 1 to 255 or one of the following protocol keywords:

· ARP--Address Resolution Protocol

· ICP--Internet Control Protocol

· IP--VINES Internet Protocol

· IPC--Interprocess Communications

· RTP--Routing Update Protocol

· SPP--Sequence Packets Protocol

source-address Address of the network from which the packet is being sent. This is a 6-byte hexadecimal number in the format network:host, where network is 4 bytes and host is 2 bytes.
source-mask Mask to be applied to source-address. This is a 6-byte hexadecimal value. Place ones in the bit positions you want to mask. These bits correspond to the bits in the address that should be ignored.
source-port Number of the local port from which the packet is being sent. This argument is required when the protocol specified is IPC or SPP, and is not accepted when any other protocol is specified. It can be a number from 0x0000 through 0xFFFF. Well-known local port numbers have values from 0x0001 through 0x01FF. Transient local port numbers have values from 0x0200 through 0xFFFE. Refer to the IPC port number table in the Router Products Command Reference publication for a list of some IPC port numbers.
source-port-mask (Optional) Mask to be applied to source-port. This argument is required when the protocol specified is IPC or SPP, and is not accepted when any other protocol is specified. It can be a number from 0x0000 through 0xFFFF. These bits correspond to the bits in the port that should be ignored.
destination-address VINES address of the network to which the packet is being sent. This is a 6-byte hexadecimal number in the format network:host, where network is 4 bytes and host is 2 bytes.
destination-mask Mask to be applied to destination-address. This is a 6-byte hexadecimal value. Place ones in the bit positions you want to mask. These bits correspond to the bits in the address that should be ignored.
destination-port Number of the local port to which the packet is being sent. This argument is required when the protocol specified is IPC or SPP, and is not accepted when any other protocol is specified. It can be a number from 0x0000 through 0xFFFF. Well-known local port numbers have values from 0x0001 through 0x01FF. Transient local port numbers have values from 0x0200 through 0xFFFE. Refer to the IPC port number table in the Router Products Command Reference publication for a list of some IPC port numbers.
destination-port-mask (Optional) Mask to be applied to destination-port. This argument is required when the protocol specified is IPC or SPP, and is not accepted when any other protocol is specified. It can be a number from 0x0000 through 0xFFFF. These bits correspond to the bits in the port that should be ignored.

vines access-list access-list-number {deny | permit} source-address
source-mask
no vines access-list access-list-number

To create a simple VINES access list, use this version of the vines access-list global configuration command. To remove a simple access list, use the no form of this command.

access-list-number Access list number. It is a number from 201 to 300.
deny Denies access if the conditions are matched.
permit Allows access if the conditions are matched.
source-address Address of the network from which the packet is being sent. This is a 6-byte hexadecimal number in the format network:host, where network is 4 bytes and host is 2 bytes.
source-mask Mask to be applied to source-address. This is a 6-byte hexadecimal value. Place ones in the bit positions you want to mask. These bits correspond to the bits in the address that should be ignored.

[no] vines arp-enable [dynamic]

To enable the processing of ARP packets, use the vines arp-enable interface configuration command. To disable the processing of ARP packets, use the no form of this command.By default, the interface always responds toRP and SARP requests.

dynamic (Optional) Respond to ARP and SARP requests on this interface only if there are no other VINES servers present.

[no] vines decimal

To display VINES addresses in decimal notation, use the vines decimal global configuration command. To return to displaying the addresses in hexadecimal, use the no form of this command. By default, addresses are displayed in hexadecimal.

vines encapsulation [arpa | snap | vines-tr]
no vines encapsulation

To set the MAC-level encapsulation used for VINES broadcast packets, use the vines encapsulation interface configuration command. To disable encapsulation, use the no form of this command.

arpa (Optional) ARPA encapsulation. This is the default encapsulation for Ethernet interfaces.
snap (Optional) SNAP encapsulation. This encapsulation uses an IEEE 802.2 SNAP header. This is the default encapsulation for all media except Ethernet and Token Ring.
vines-tr (Optional) Our VINES Token Ring encapsulation. This is the default encapsulation for Token Ring interfaces.

vines host name address
no vines host name

To associate a host name with a VINES address, use the vines host global configuration command. To delete the association, use the no form of this command. The default is to display hosts by address.

name VINES host name. It can be any length and sequence of characters separated by white space.
address Number of a VINES network. You enter it in the current VINES radix, in the format network:host, where network is 4 bytes and host is 2 bytes.

vines input-network-filter access-list-number
no vines input-network-filter

To filter the information contained in routing messages received from other stations, use the vines input-network-filter interface configuration command. To disable this filtering, use the no form of this command.

access-list-number Number of the access list. It is a decimal number from 201 to 300.

vines input-router-filter access-list-number
no vines input-router-filter

To filter received routing messages based upon the address of the sending station, use the vines input-router-filter interface configuration command. To disable this filtering, use the no form of this command.

access-list-number Number of the access list. It is a decimal number from 201 to 300.

vines metric [whole [fractional]]
no vines metric

To enable VINES routing on an interface, use the vines metric interface configuration command. To disable VINES routing, use the no form of this command.

whole (Optional) Integer cost value associated with the interface. It is optional for all interface types. If you omit metric, the router automatically chooses a reasonable value. Refer to the metric values table in the Router Products Command Reference publication. If metric is zero, then a fractional portion must be supplied.
fractional (Optional) Fractional cost value associated with the interface expressed in 10,000ths. It is optional for all interface types, but may only be present if a whole number portion is specified. This number will be rounded to the nearest 1/16th. If you omit metric, the router automatically chooses a reasonable value. These values are listed in VINES IPC port number table in the Router Products Command Reference publication.

vines neighbor address mac-address encapsulation [whole [fractional]]
no vines neighbor address mac-address

To specify a static path to a neighbor station, use the vines neighbor interface configuration command. To remove a static path from the neighbor table, use the no form of this command.

address VINES IP address of the station to which to add or remove a static path.
mac-address MAC-level address used to reach the neighbor station.
encapsulation Encapsulation type to use on the media. It can be one of the following values:

· arpa--Use ARPA encapsulation. This is recommended for Ethernet interfaces.

· snap--Use an IEEE 802.2 SNAP header. This is recommended for FDDI interfaces.

· vines-tr--Use our VINES Token Ring encapsulation. This is recommended for Token Ring interfaces.

whole (Optional) Delay metric to use on the neighbor. If you omit this argument, the metric used is that specified with the vines metric command for the selected interface.
fractional (Optional) Fractional metric value associated with this neighbor. This number will be rounded to the nearest 1/16th. If you omit both whole and fractional numbers, then the interface metric will be used.

vines output-network-filter access-list-number
no vines output-network-filter

To filter the information contained in routing updates transmitted to other stations, use the vines output-network-filter interface configuration command. To disable this filtering, use the no form of this command.

access-list-number Number of the access list. It is a decimal number from 201 to 300.

[no] vines propagate [dynamic]

To modify how routers forward a broadcast packet, use the vines propagate interface configuration command. To return to the default dynamic forwarding scheme, use the no form of this command. If you omit the keyword, broadcast messages are always propagated on the interface.

dynamic (Optional) Propagates broadcasts on this interface only if there are no servers on any local network.

vines redirect [seconds]
no vines redirect

To determine how frequently a router sends an RTP redirect message on an interface, use the vines redirect interface configuration command. To restore the default, use the no form of this command.

seconds (Optional) Interval, in seconds, that the router waits after sending a redirect message on an interface before it sends another redirect message on that same interface. If you specify a value of 0, the router never sends redirect messages on that interface. The default is 1 second.

[no] vines route number address [whole [fractional]]

To specify a static route to a server, use the vines route global configuration command. To remove a static route from the routing table, use the no form of this command. By default, no static routes are specified.

number Number of the server to which to add or remove the static route
address VINES IP address of the neighbor station to use to reach the server
whole (Optional) Metric value assigned to this route
fractional (Optional) Fractional cost value associated with this route

[no] vines route-cache

To enable fast switching, use the vines route-cache interface configuration command. To disable fast switching, use the no form of this command.

vines routing [address | recompute]
no vines routing

To enable VINES routing, use the vines routing global configuration command. To disable VINES routing, use the no form of this command.

address (Optional) Network address of the router. You should specify an address on a router that does not have any Ethernet or FDDI interfaces. You also can specify an address in the unlikely event that two routers map themselves to the same address.
recompute (Optional) Dynamically redetermine the router's network address.

[no] vines serverless [dynamic | broadcast]

To configure a Banyan VINES network that does not have a server, use the vines serverless interface configuration command. To turn off this functionality, use the no form of this command. If all keywords are omitted, broadcasts are alwasy forwarded toward one server.

dynamic (Optional) Forward broadcasts toward one server only if there are no servers present on this interface. This is the default.
broadcast (Optional) Flood broadcasts out all router interfaces in order to reach all servers.

[no] vines split-horizon

To use split horizon when sending routing updates, use the vines split-horizon interface configuration command. To disable split horizon, use the no form of this command.

[no] vines srtp-enabled

To enable Sequenced Routing Update Protocol (SRTP), use the vines srtp-enabled global configuration command. To disable SRTP, use the no form of this command.

vines time access-group access-list-number
no vines time access-group

To control the servers from which the router will accept VINES network time, use the vines time access-group global configuration command. To accept VINES network time messages from any server, use the no form of this command.

access-list-number Number of the access list. It is a decimal number from 201 to 300.

vines time destination address
no vines time destination

To control the servers to which the router sends VINES network time, use the vines time destination global configuration command. To send VINES network time messages to all servers, use the no form of this command.

address Destination VINES address for the network time messages

[no] vines time participate

To enable the router's participation in the synchronization of time across a VINES network, use the vines time participate global configuration command. To disable the router's participation in time synchronization, use the no form of this command.

[no] vines time set-system

To set the router's internal time based upon the received VINES network time, use the vines time set-system global configuration command. To uncouple the router's time from VINES network time, use the no form of this command.

[no] vines time use-system

To set VINES network time based upon the router's internal time, use the vines time use-system global configuration command. To uncouple VINES network time from the router's time, use the no form of this command.

[no] vines update deltas

To modify the manner in which routing updates are sent, use the vines update deltas interface configuration command. To return to the default method, use the no form of this command.

[no] vines update interval [seconds]

To modify the frequency at which routing updates are sent, use the vines update interval interface configuration command. To return to the default frequency, use the no form of this command.

seconds Interval, in seconds, between the sending of periodic VINES routing updates. This can be a number in the range 0 to 232 and will be rounded up to the nearest 5 seconds. The default value is 90 seconds. If you omit seconds or specify a value of 0, the default value of 90 seconds is used.

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