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This chapter describes the function and displays the syntax of each ISO CLNS command. For more information about defaults and usage guidelines, see the corresponding chapter of the Router Products Command Reference publication.
[no] area-password [password]
Use the area-password router configuration command to configure the area authentication password. The no form of this command disables the password.
clear clns cache
Use the clear clns cache EXEC command to clear and reinitialize the CLNS routing cache.
clear clns es-neighbors
Use the clear clns es-neighbors EXEC command to remove ES neighbor information from the adjacency database.
clear clns is-neighbors
Use the clear clns is-neighbors EXEC command to remove IS neighbor information from the adjacency database.
clear clns neighbors
Use the clear clns neighbors EXEC command to remove CLNS neighbor information from the adjacency database.
clear clns route
Use the clear clns route EXEC command to remove all of the dynamically derived CLNS routing information.
[no] clns access-group name [in | out]
Use the clns access-group interface configuration command to filter transit CLNS traffic going either into or out of the router or both on a per-interface basis. Use the no form of this command to disable filtering of transit CLNS packets.
[no] clns adjacency-filter {es | is} name
Use the clns adjacency-filter interface configuration command to filter the establishment of CLNS end system (ES) and intermediate system (IS) adjacencies. Use the no form of this command to disable this filtering.
[no] clns checksum
Use the clns checksum interface configuration command to enable checksum generation when ISO CLNS routing software sources a CLNS packet. Use the no form of this command to disable checksum generation.
[no] clns cluster-alias
Use the clns cluster-alias interface configuration command to allow multiple systems to advertise the same system ID as other systems in end-system hello messages. The no form of this command disables cluster aliasing.
clns configuration-time seconds
no clns configuration-time
Use the clns configuration-time global configuration command to specify the rate at which ES hellos (ESHs) and IS hellos (ISHs) are sent. You can restore the default value by specifying the no form of this command.
clns congestion-threshold number
no clns congestion-threshold
Use the clns congestion-threshold interface configuration command to set the congestion experienced bit if the output queue has more than the specified number of packets in it. A number value of zero or the no form of the command prevents this bit from being set. Use the no form of this command to remove the parameter setting and set it to 0.
Number of packets that are allowed in the output queue before the system sets the congestion-experienced bit. The value zero (0) prevents this bit from being set. The default is 4. |
[no] clns dec-compatible
Use the clns dec-compatible interface configuration command to allow ISHs sent and received to ignore the N-selector byte. Use the no form of this command to disable this feature.
[no] clns enable
Use the clns enable interface configuration command if you do not intend to perform any static or dynamic routing on an interface, but intend to pass ISO CLNS packet traffic to end systems. Use the no form of this command to disable ISO CLNS on a particular interface.
[no] clns erpdu-interval milliseconds
Use the clns erpdu-interval interface configuration command to determine the minimum interval time, in milliseconds, between error PDUs (ERPDUs). A milliseconds value of zero or the no form of this command turns off the interval and effectively sets no limit between ERPDUs.
[no] clns esct-time seconds
Use the clns esct-time interface configuration command to supply an ES Configuration Timer (ESCT) option in a transmitted IS hello packet that tells the end system how often it should transmit ES hello packet protocol data units (PDUs). Use the no form of this command to restore the default value and disable this feature.
clns es-neighbor nsap snpa
no clns es-neighbor nsap
Use the clns es-neighbor interface configuration command to list all end systems that will be used when you manually specify the NSAP-to-SNPA mapping. The SNPAs are the MAC addresses. Use the no form of this command to delete the ES neighbor.
clns filter-expr ename term
clns filter-expr ename not term
clns filter-expr ename term or term
clns filter-expr ename term and term
clns filter-expr ename term xor term
no clns filter-expr ename
Use one or more clns filter-expr global configuration commands to combine CLNS filter sets and CLNS address templates into complex logical NSAP pattern-matching expressions. The no form of this command deletes the expression. There are many forms of this command.
clns filter-set sname [permit | deny] template
no clns filter-set sname
Use one or more clns filter-set global configuration commands to build a list of CLNS address templates with associated permit and deny conditions for use in CLNS filter expressions. CLNS filter expressions are used in the creation and use of CLNS access lists. The no form of this command deletes the entire filter set.
clns holding-time seconds
no clns holding-time
Use the clns holding-time global configuration command to allow the sender of an ESH or ISH to specify the length of time you consider the information in the hello packets to be valid. You can restore the default value (300 seconds or 5 minutes) by using the no form of this command.
Length of time in seconds during which the information in the hello packets is considered valid. The default is 300 seconds (5 minutes). |
clns host name nsap
Use the clns host global configuration command to define a name-to-NSAP mapping that can then be used with commands requiring NSAPs.
Desired name for the NSAP. The first character can be either a letter or a number, but if you use a number, the operations you can perform are limited. |
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clns is-neighbor nsap snpa
no clns is-neighbor nsap
Use the clns is-neighbor interface configuration command to list all intermediate systems that will be used when you manually specify the NSAP-to-SNPA mapping. The SNPAs are the MAC addresses. Use the no form of this command to delete the specified IS neighbor.
clns mtu size
no clns mtu
Use the clns mtu interface configuration command to set the MTU packet size for the interface. The no form of this command restores the default and maximum packet size.
Maximum packet size in bytes. The minimum value is 512; the default and maximum packet size depends on the interface type. |
[no] clns net {net-address | name}
Use the clns net global configuration command to assign a static address for a router. If a router is configured to support ISO CLNS but is not configured to dynamically route CLNS packets using ISO-IGRP or IS-IS, use this command to assign an address to the router. The no form of this command removes any previously configured NET or NSAP address.
Network Entity Title (NET). See this command in the Router Products Command Reference publication for the algorithm used. |
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[no] clns net {nsap-address | name}
Use this form of the clns net command as an interface configuration command to assign an NSAP address or name to a router interface. If a router is configured to support ISO CLNS, but is not configured to dynamically route CLNS packets using a ISO-IGRP or IS-IS, use this command to assign an address to the router. The no form of this command removes any previously configured NSAP address.
clns packet-lifetime seconds
no clns packet-lifetime
Use the clns packet-lifetime global configuration command to specify the initial lifetime for locally generated packets. The no form of this command removes the parameter's settings.
[no] clns rdpdu-interval milliseconds
Use the clns rdpdu-interval interface configuration command to determine the minimum interval time, in milliseconds, between redirect PDUs (RDPDUs). A milliseconds value of zero or the no form of this command turns off the interval rate and effectively sets no limit between RDPDUs.
clns route nsap-prefix type number [snpa-address]
no clns route nsap-prefix
Use this form of the clns route global configuration command to create an interface static route. The no form of the command removes this route.
clns route nsap-prefix {next-hop-net | name}
no clns route nsap-prefix
Use this form of the clns route global configuration command to enter a specific static route. NSAPs that start with nsap-prefix are forwarded to next-hop-net or the name of the next hop. The no form of this command removes this route.
clns route default nsap-prefix type number
no clns route default
Use this form of the clns route default global configuration command to configure a default zero-length prefix rather than type an NSAP prefix. The no form of this command removes this route.
clns route nsap-prefix discard
no clns route nsap-prefix
Use this form of the clns route discard global configuration command to tell a router explicitly to discard packets with NSAP addresses that match the specified nsap-prefix. The no form of this command removes this route.
[no] clns route-cache
Use the clns route-cache interface configuration command to allow fast switching through the cache. To disable fast switching, use the no form of this command.
[no] clns router isis [tag]
Use the clns router isis interface configuration command to enable IS-IS routing for OSI on a specified interface. Use the no form of this command with the appropriate area tag to disable IS-IS on the interface.
clns router iso-igrp tag [level 2]
no clns router iso-igrp tag
Use the clns router iso-igrp interface configuration command to specify ISO-IGRP routing on a specified interface. Use the no form of this command with the appropriate tag to disable ISO-IGRP routing on the interface.
[no] clns routing
Use the clns routing global configuration command to enable routing of CLNS packets. Use the no form of this command to disable CLNS routing.
[no] clns security pass-through
Use the clns security pass-through global configuration command to allow the router to pass packets that have security options set. To revert to the default, use the no form of this command.
[no] clns send-erpdu
Use the clns send-erpdu interface configuration command to allow CLNS to send an error PDU when the routing software detects an error in a data PDU. To disable this function, use the no form of this command.
[no] clns send-rdpdu
Use the clns send-rdpdu interface configuration command to allow CLNS to send redirect PDUs (RDPDUs) when a better route for a given host is known. To disable this function, use the no form of this command.
[no] clns split-horizon
Use the clns split-horizon interface configuration command to implement split horizon for ISO-IGRP updates. The no form of this command disables this feature.
clns template-alias name template
no clns template-alias name
Use one or more clns template-alias global configuration commands to build a list of alphanumeric aliases of CLNS address templates for use in the definition of CLNS filter sets. The no form of this command deletes the alias.
Address template. See this command in the Router Products Command Reference publication for more information. |
[no] clns want-erpdu
Use the clns want-erpdu global configuration command to specify whether to request error PDUs on packets sourced by the router. The no form of this command removes the parameter's settings.
[no] distance value [clns]
Use the distance router configuration command to configure the administrative distance for CLNS routes learned. The no form of this command restores the administrative distance to the default.
[no] domain-password [password]
Use the domain-password router configuration command to configure the routing domain authentication password. The no form of this command disables the password.
[no] ip domain-lookup nsap
Use the ip domain-lookup nsap global configuration command to allow Domain Name System (DNS) queries for CLNS addresses. To disable this feature, specify the no form of this command.
[no] is-type {level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2-only}
Use the is-type router configuration command to configure the IS-IS level at which the router is to operate. The no form of this command resets the parameter to the default.
[no] isis adjacency-filter name [match-all]
Use the isis adjacency-filter interface configuration command to filter the establishment of IS-IS adjacencies. Use the no form of this command to disable filtering of the establishment of IS-IS adjacencies.
(Optional) All NSAP addresses must match the filter in order to accept the adjacency. If not specified (the default), only one address need match the filter in order for the adjacency to be accepted. |
isis circuit-type {level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2-only}
no isis circuit-type
Use the isis circuit-type interface configuration command to configure the type of adjacency desired for the specified interface. The no form of this command resets the circuit type to Level l and Level 2.
[no] isis csnp-interval seconds {level-1 | level-2}
Use the isis csnp-interval interface configuration command to configure the IS-IS complete sequence number PDUs (CSNP) interval for the specified interface. The no form of this command restores the default value.
[no] isis hello-interval seconds {level-1 | level-2}
Use the isis hello-interval interface configuration command to specify the length of time in seconds between hello packets that the router sends on the specified interface. The no form of this command restores the default value.
isis metric default-metric delay-metric expense-metric error-metric
{level-1 | level-2}
no isis metric {level-1 | level-2}
Use the isis metric interface configuration command to configure the metric (or cost) for the specified interface. The no form of this command restores the default metric value.
isis password password {level-1 | level-2}
no isis password {level-1 | level-2}
Use the isis password interface configuration command to configure the authentication password for a specified interface. The no form of this command disables authentication for IS-IS.
isis priority value {level-1 | level-2}
no isis priority {level-1 | level-2}
Use the isis priority interface configuration command to configure the priority of this system for designated router election. The no form of this command resets priority to 64.
[no] isis retransmit-interval seconds
Use the isis retransmit-interval interface configuration command to configure the number of seconds between retransmission of IS-IS link-state PDU (LSP) retransmission for point-to-point links. The no form of this command restores the default value.
[no] iso-igrp adjacency-filter name
Use the iso-igrp adjacency-filter interface configuration command to filter the establishment of ISO-IGRP adjacencies. Use the no form of this command to disable filtering of the establishment of ISO-IGRP adjacencies.
[no] match clns address name [name...name]
To define the address match criterion, use the match clns address route-map configuration command; routes that have a network address matching one or more of the namesand that satisfy all other defined match criteriawill be redistributed. To remove the match criterion, use the no form of this command.
[no] match clns next-hop name [name...name]
Use the match clns next-hop route-map configuration command to define the next-hop match criterion; routes that have a next-hop router address matching one of the namesand that satisfy all other defined match criteriawill be redistributed.
[no] match clns route-source name [name..name]
Use the match clns route-source route-map configuration command to define the route-source match criterion; routes that have been advertised by routers at the address specified by the nameand that satisfy all other defined match criteriawill be redistributed. Use the no form of this command to remove the specified match criterion.
[no] match interface type number [type number...type number]
Use the match interface route-map configuration command to define the interface match criterion; routes that have the next hop out one of the interfaces specifiedand that satisfy all other defined match criteriawill be redistributed. Use the no form of this command to remove the specified match criterion.
[no] match metric metric-value
Use the match metric route-map configuration command to define the metric match criterion; routes that have the specified metricand that satisfy all other defined match criteriawill be redistributed. Use the no form of this command to remove the specified match criterion.
[no] match route-type {level-1 | level-2}
Use the match route-type route-map configuration command to define the route-type match criterion; routes that have the specified route typeand that satisfy all other defined match criteriawill be redistributed. Use the no form of the command to remove the specified match criterion.
metric weights qos k1 k2 k3 k4 k5
no metric weights
Use the metric weights router configuration command to specify different metrics for the ISO-IGRP routing protocol on CLNS. This command allows you to configure the metric constants used in the ISO-IGRP composite metric calculation of reliability and load. Use the no metric weights command to return the five k constants to their default values.
[no] net network-entity-title
Use the net router configuration command to configure a Network Entity Title (NET) for the specified routing process. The no form of this command removes a specific NET; you must specify the NET.
ping clns {host | address}
Use the ping user and privileged EXEC command to send ISO CLNS echo packets to test the reachability of a remote host over a connectionless OSI network.
[no] redistribute protocol [tag] [route-map map-tag]
redistribute {static [clns | ip]}
Use the redistribute router configuration command to redistribute routing information from one domain into another routing domain. The no form of this command disables redistribution, or disables any of the specified keywords.
[no] route-map map-tag [[permit | deny] | sequence-number]
Use the route-map global configuration command, and the route-map configuration commands match and set, to define the conditions for redistributing routes from one routing protocol into another. Each route-map command has a list of match and set commands associated with it. The match commands specify the match criteriathe conditions under which redistribution is allowed for the current route-map. The set commands specify the set actionsthe particular redistribution actions to perform if the criteria enforced by the match commands are met. The no form of this command deletes the route map.
[no] router isis [tag]
Use the router isis global configuration command to enable the IS-IS routing protocol on your router and to configure the IS-IS routing process. This command identifies the area the router will work in and lets the router know that it will be routing dynamically rather than statically. The no form of this command with the appropriate tag disables IS-IS routing for the system.
[no] router iso-igrp [tag]
Use the router iso-igrp global configuration command to identify the area the router will work in and let it know that it will be routing dynamically using the ISO-IGRP protocol. The no form of this command with the appropriate tag disables ISO-IGRP routing for the system.
[no] set level {level-1 | level-2 | level-1-2}
Use the set level route-map configuration command to specify the routing level of routes to be advertised into a specified area of the routing domain. Use the no form of this command to disable advertising the specified routing level into a specified area.
Redistributed routes are advertised into this specified area of the routing domain. For IS-IS destinations, the default value is level-2. |
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[no] set metric metric-value
Use the set metric route-map configuration command to set the metric value to give the redistributed routes.
[no] set metric-type {internal | external}
Use the set metric-type route-map configuration command to set the metric type to give redistributed routes.
[no] set tag tag-value
Use set tag route-map configuration command to set a tag value to associate with the redistributed routes.
Tag value to associate with the redistributed route. If not specified, the default action is to forward the tag in the source routing protocol onto the new destination protocol. |
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show clns
Use the show clns EXEC command to display information about the CLNS network.
show clns cache
Use the show clns cache EXEC command to display the CLNS routing cache. The cache contains an entry for each destination that has packet switching enabled. The output of this command includes entries showing each destination for which the router has switched a packet in the recent past. This includes the router.
show clns es-neighbors [type number] [detail]
Use the show clns es-neighbors EXEC command to list the ES neighbors (end-system adjacencies) that this router knows about.
(Optional) When specified, the areas associated with the End Systems are displayed. Otherwise, a summary display is provided. |
show clns filter-expr [name] [detail]
Use the show clns filter-expr EXEC command to display one or all currently defined CLNS filter expressions.
show clns filter-set [name]
Use the show clns filter-set EXEC command to display one or all currently defined CLNS filter sets.
show clns interface [type number]
Use the show clns interface EXEC command to list the CLNS-specific information about each interface.
show clns is-neighbors [type number] [detail]
Use the show clns is-neighbors EXEC command to display IS-IS related information for IS-IS router adjacencies. Neighbor entries are sorted according to the area in which they are located.
(Optional) When specified, the areas associated with the Intermediate Systems are displayed. Otherwise, a summary display is provided. |
show clns neighbors [type number] [detail]
The show clns neighbors EXEC command displays both ES and IS neighbors.
(Optional) When specified, the area addresses advertised by the neighbor in the hello messages is displayed. Otherwise, a summary display is provided. |
show clns protocol [domain | area-tag]
Use the show clns protocol EXEC command to list the protocol-specific information for each ISO-IGRP routing process in the router. There will always be at least two routing processes, a Level 1 and a Level 2, and there can be more.
show clns route [nsap]
Use the show clns route EXEC command to display all of the destinations to which this router knows how to route packets.
The show clns route command shows the IS-IS Level 2 routing table as well as static and ISO-IGRP learned prefix routes. This table stores IS-IS area addresses and prefix routes. Destinations are sorted by category.
show clns traffic
Use the show clns traffic EXEC command to list the CLNS packets this router has seen.
show isis database [level-1] [level-2] [l1] [l2] [detail] [lspid]
Use the show isis database EXEC command to display the IS-IS link state database. A summary display is provided if no options are specified.
show isis routes
Use the show isis routes EXEC command to display the IS-IS Level 1 forwarding table for IS-IS learned routes.
show route-map [map-name]
Use the show route-map EXEC command to display all route-maps configured or only the one specified.
[no] timers basic update-interval holddown-interval invalid-interval
Use the timers basic router configuration command to configure ISO-IGRP timers. The no form of this command restores the default values.
trace
You can use the trace privileged EXEC command to trace routes on a router configured with the ISO CLNS protocol.
trace clns destination
Use the trace clns user EXEC command to discover the CLNS routes the router's packets will actually take when traveling to their destination.
Destination address or host name on the command line. The default parameters for the appropriate protocol are assumed and the tracing action begins. |
which-route {nsap-address | clns-name}
Use the which-route EXEC command if you want to know which next-hop router will be used or if you have multiple processes running and want to troubleshoot your configuration. This command displays the routing table in which the specified CLNS destination is found.
Posted: Wed Jul 2 23:51:07 PDT 2003
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