This chapter describes the function and displays the syntax for IP
addressing commands. For more information about defaults and usage guidelines,
see the corresponding chapter of the Network Protocols Command Reference,
Part 1.
To add a permanent entry in the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) cache,
use the arp global configuration command. To remove an entry from the
ARP cache, use the no form of this command.
arp ip-address hardware-address
type [alias]
no arp ip-address hardware-address type [alias]
| ip-address |
IP address in four-part dotted-decimal format corresponding to the
local data link address. |
| hardware-address |
Local data link address (a 48-bit address). |
| type |
Encapsulation description. For Ethernet interfaces, this is typically
the arpa keyword. For Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI) and
Token Ring interfaces, this is always snap. |
| alias |
(Optional) Indicates that the Cisco IOS software should respond to ARP
requests as if it were the owner of the specified address. |
To control the interface-specific handling of IP address resolution into
48-bit Ethernet, FDDI, and Token Ring hardware addresses, use the arp
interface configuration command. To disable an encapsulation type, use the
no form of this command.
arp {arpa | probe |
snap}
no arp {arpa | probe | snap}
| arpa |
Standard Ethernet-style ARP (RFC 826). |
| probe |
HP Probe protocol for IEEE-802.3 networks. |
| snap |
ARP packets conforming to RFC 1042. |
To configure how long an entry remains in the ARP cache, use the arp
timeout interface configuration command. To restore the default value,
use the no form of this command.
arp timeout seconds
no arp timeout seconds
To delete all dynamic entries from the ARP cache, to clear the
fast-switching cache, and to clear the IP route cache, use the clear arp-cache
EXEC command.
clear arp-cache
To delete entries from the host-name-and-address cache, use the clear
host EXEC command.
clear host {name |
*}
| name |
Particular host entry to remove. |
| * |
Removes all entries. |
To clear dynamic Network Address Translation (NAT) translations from the
translation table, use the clear ip nat translation EXEC command.
clear ip nat translation {* | [inside global-ip
local-ip] [outside local-ip global-ip]}
clear ip nat translation protocol inside global-ip
global-port local-ip local-port [outside
local-ip global-ip]
| * |
Clears all dynamic translations. |
| inside |
Clears the inside translations containing the specified global-ip
and local-ip addresses. |
| global-ip |
When used without the arguments protocol, global-port,
and local-port, clears a simple translation that also contains the
specified local-ip address. When used with the arguments
protocol, global-port, and local-port, clears an
extended translation. |
| local-ip |
(Optional) Clears an entry that contains this local IP address and the
specified global-ip address. |
| outside |
Clears the outside translations containing the specified global-ip
and local-ip addresses. |
| protocol |
(Optional) Clears an entry that contains this protocol and the
specified global-ip address, local-ip address,
global-port, and local-port. |
| global-port |
(Optional) Clears an entry that contains this global-port and
the specified protocol, global-ip address, local-ip
address, and local-port. |
| local-port |
(Optional) Clears an entry that contains this local-port and
the specified protocol, global-ip address, local-ip
address, and global-port. |
To clear all dynamic entries from the Next Hop Resolution Protocol (NHRP)
cache, use the clear ip nhrp EXEC command.
clear ip nhrp
To delete routes from the IP routing table, use the clear ip route
EXEC command.
clear ip route {network
[mask] | *}
| network |
Network or subnet address to remove. |
| mask |
(Optional) Subnet address to remove. |
| * |
Removes all routing table entries. |
To set a primary or secondary IP address for an interface, use the ip
address interface configuration command. To remove an IP address or
disable IP processing, use the no form of this command.
ip address ip-address mask
[secondary]
no ip address ip-address mask [secondary]
To define a broadcast address for an interface, use the ip
broadcast-address interface configuration command. To restore the default
IP broadcast address, use the no form of this command.
ip broadcast-address [ip-address]
no ip broadcast-address [ip-address]
| ip-address |
(Optional) IP broadcast address for a network. |
At times the router might receive packets destined for a subnet of a
network that has no network default route. To have the Cisco IOS software
forward such packets to the best supernet route possible, use the ip
classless global configuration command. To disable this feature, use the
no form of this command.
ip classless
no ip classless
To define a default gateway (router) when IP routing is disabled, use the
ip default-gateway global configuration command. To disable this
function, use the no form of this command.
ip default-gateway ip-address
no ip default-gateway ip-address
| ip-address |
IP address of the router. |
To enable the translation of directed broadcast to physical broadcasts, use
the ip directed-broadcast interface configuration command. To disable
this function, use the no form of this command.
ip directed-broadcast [access-list-number]
no ip directed-broadcast [access-list-number]
| access-list-number |
(Optional) Number of the access list. If specified, a broadcast must
pass the access list to be forwarded. If not specified, all broadcasts are
forwarded. |
To define a list of default domain names to complete unqualified host
names, use the ip domain-list global configuration command. To delete a
name from a list, use the no form of this command.
ip domain-list name
no ip domain-list name
| name |
Domain name. Do not include the initial period that separates an
unqualified name from the domain name. |
To enable the IP Domain Naming System (DNS)-based host name-to-address
translation, use the ip domain-lookup global configuration command. To
disable the DNS, use the no form of this command.
ip domain-lookup
no ip domain-lookup
To allow DNS queries for Connectionless Network System (CLNS) addresses,
use the ip domain-lookup nsap global configuration command. To disable
this feature, use the no form of this command.
ip domain-lookup nsap
no ip domain-lookup nsap
To define a default domain name that the Cisco IOS software uses to
complete unqualified host names (names without a dotted-decimal domain name),
use the ip domain-name global configuration command. To disable use of
the DNS, use the no form of this command.
ip domain-name name
no ip domain-name
| name |
Default domain name used to complete unqualified host names. Do not
include the initial period that separates an unqualified name from the
domain name. |
To specify which protocols and ports the router forwards when forwarding
broadcast packets, use the ip forward-protocol global configuration
command. To remove a protocol or port, use the no form of this command.
ip forward-protocol {udp [port] | nd | sdns}
no ip forward-protocol {udp [port] | nd | sdns}
| udp |
Forward User Datagram Protocol (UDP) datagrams. See the "Default"
section below for a list of port numbers forwarded by default. |
| port |
(Optional) Destination port that controls which UDP services are
forwarded. |
| nd |
Forward Network Disk (ND) datagrams. This protocol is used by older
diskless Sun workstations. |
| sdns |
Secure Data Network Service. |
To forward any broadcasts including local subnet broadcasts, use the ip
forward-protocol any-local-broadcast global configuration command. To
disable this type of forwarding, use the no form of this command.
ip forward-protocol any-local-broadcast
no ip forward-protocol any-local-broadcast
To permit IP broadcasts to be flooded throughout the internetwork in a
controlled fashion, use the ip forward-protocol spanning-tree global
configuration command. To disable the flooding of IP broadcasts, use the no
form of this command.
ip forward-protocol spanning-tree
no ip forward-protocol spanning-tree
To speed up flooding of User Datagram Protocol (UDP) datagrams using the
spanning-tree algorithm, use the ip forward-protocol turbo-flood global
configuration command. To disable this feature, use the no form of this
command.
ip forward-protocol turbo-flood
no ip forward-protocol turbo-flood
To have the Cisco IOS software forward User Datagram Protocol (UDP)
broadcasts, including BOOTP, received on an interface, use the ip
helper-address interface configuration command. To disable the forwarding
of broadcast packets to specific addresses, use the no form of this
command.
ip helper-address address
no ip helper-address address
| address |
Destination broadcast or host address to be used when forwarding UDP
broadcasts. There can be more than one helper address per interface. |
To define a static host name-to-address mapping in the host cache, use the
ip host global configuration command. To remove the
name-to-address mapping, use the no form of this command.
ip host name [tcp-port-number]
address1 [address2...address8]
no ip host name address1
| name |
Name of the host. The first character can be either a letter or a
number. If you use a number, the operations you can perform are limited.
|
| tcp-port-number |
(Optional) TCP port number to connect to when using the defined host
name in conjunction with an EXEC connect or Telnet command. The default is
Telnet (port 23). |
| address1 |
Associated IP address. |
| address2...address8 |
(Optional) Additional associated IP address. You can bind up to eight
addresses to a host name. |
To enter into the host table the host name of an HP host to be used for HP
Probe Proxy service, use the ip hp-host global configuration command.
To remove a host name, use the no form of this command.
ip hp-host hostname ip-address
no ip hp-host hostname ip-address
| hostname |
Name of the host. |
| ip-address |
IP address of the host. |
To enable ICMP Router Discovery Protocol (IRDP) processing on an interface,
use the ip irdp interface configuration command. To disable IRDP
routing, use the no form of this command.
ip irdp [multicast | holdtime seconds |
maxadvertinterval seconds | minadvertinterval
seconds | preference number | address
address [number]]
no ip irdp
| multicast |
(Optional) Use the multicast address (224.0.0.1) instead of IP
broadcasts. |
| holdtime seconds |
(Optional) Length of time in seconds advertisements are held valid.
Default is three times the maxadvertinterval value. Must be greater
than maxadvertinterval and cannot be greater than 9000 seconds.
|
| maxadvertinterval seconds |
(Optional) Maximum interval in seconds between advertisements. The
default is 600 seconds. |
| minadvertinterval seconds |
(Optional) Minimum interval in seconds between advertisements. The
default is 0.75 times the maxadvertinterval. If you change the
maxadvertinterval value, this value defaults to three-quarters of the
new value. |
| preference number |
(Optional) Preference value. The allowed range is -231 to 231.
The default is 0. A higher value increases the router's preference level.
You can modify a particular router so that it will be the preferred router
to which others home. |
| address address [number] |
(Optional) IP address (address) to proxy-advertise, and
optionally, its preference value (number). |
To enable local-area mobility, use the ip mobile arp interface
configuration command. To disable local-area mobility, use the no form
of this command.
ip mobile arp [timers keepalive hold-time] [access-group
access-list-number | name]
no ip mobile arp [timers keepalive hold-time] [access-group
access-list-number | name]
| timers |
(Optional) Indicates that you are setting local-area mobility timers.
|
| keepalive |
(Optional) Frequency, in seconds, at which the Cisco IOS software
sends unicast ARP messages to a relocated host to verify that the host is
present and has not moved. The default keepalive time is 300 seconds (5
minutes). |
| hold-time |
(Optional) Hold time, in seconds. This is the length of time the
software considers that a relocated host is present without receiving some
type of ARP broadcast or unicast from the host. Normally, the hold time
should be at least three times greater than the keepalive time. The
default hold time is 900 seconds (15 minutes). |
| access-group |
(Optional) Indicates that you are applying an access list. This access
list applies only to local-area mobility. |
| access-list-number |
(Optional) Number of a standard IP access list. It is a decimal number
from 1 to 99. Only hosts with addresses permitted by this access list are
accepted for local-area mobility. |
| name |
(Optional) Name of an IP access list. The name cannot contain a space
or quotation mark, and must begin with an alphabetic character to avoid
ambiguity with numbered access lists. |
To specify the address of one or more name servers to use for name and
address resolution, use the ip name-server global configuration
command. To remove the addresses specified, use the no form of this
command.
ip name-server server-address1
[[server-address2]...server-address6]
no ip name-server server-address1 [[server-address2]...server-address6]
| server-address1 |
IP addresses of name server. |
| server-address2...server-address6 |
(Optional) IP addresses of additional name servers (a maximum of six
name servers). |
To designate that traffic originating from or destined for the interface is
subject to Network Address Translation (NAT), use the ip nat interface
configuration command. To prevent the interface from being able to translate,
use the no form of this command.
ip nat {inside | outside}
no ip nat {inside | outside}
| inside |
Indicates the interface is connected to the inside network (the
network subject to NAT translation). |
| outside |
Indicates the interface is connected to the outside network. |
To enable Network Address Translation (NAT) of the inside destination
address, use the ip nat inside destination global configuration
command. To remove the dynamic association to a pool, use the no form
of this command.
ip nat inside destination list {access-list-number
| name} pool name
no ip nat inside destination list {access-list-number | name}
| list access-list-number |
Standard IP access list number. Packets with destination addresses
that pass the access list are translated using global addresses from the
named pool. |
| list name |
Name of a standard IP access list. Packets with destination addresses
that pass the access list are translated using global addresses from the
named pool. |
| pool name |
Name of the pool from which global IP addresses are allocated during
dynamic translation. |
To enable Network Address Translation (NAT) of the inside source address,
use the ip nat inside source global configuration command. To remove
the static translation or remove the dynamic association to a pool, use the
no form of this command.
ip nat inside source {list {access-list-number |
name} pool name [overload] | static local-ip
global-ip}
no ip nat inside source {list {access-list-number | name}
pool name [overload] | static local-ip
global-ip}
| list access-list-number |
Standard IP access list number. Packets with source addresses that
pass the access list are dynamically translated using global addresses
from the named pool. |
| list name |
Name of a standard IP access list. Packets with source addresses that
pass the access list are dynamically translated using global addresses
from the named pool. |
| pool name |
Name of the pool from which global IP addresses are allocated
dynamically. |
| overload |
(Optional) Enables the router to use one global address for many local
addresses. When overloading is configured, each inside host's TCP or UDP
port number distinguishes between the multiple conversations using the
same local IP address. |
| static local-ip |
Sets up a single static translation; this argument establishes the
local IP address assigned to a host on the inside network. The address
could be randomly chosen, allocated from RFC 1918, or obsolete. |
| global-ip |
Sets up a single static translation; this argument establishes the
globally unique IP address of an inside host as it appears to the outside
world. |
To enable Network Address Translation (NAT) of the outside source address,
use the ip nat outside source global configuration command. To remove
the static entry or the dynamic association, use the no form of this
command.
ip nat outside source {list {access-list-number |
name} pool name | static global-ip local-ip}
no ip nat outside source {list {access-list-number | name}
pool name | static global-ip local-ip}
| list access-list-number |
Standard IP access list number. Packets with source addresses that
pass the access list are translated using global addresses from the named
pool. |
| list name |
Name of a standard IP access list. Packets with source addresses that
pass the access list are translated using global addresses from the named
pool. |
| pool name |
Name of the pool from which global IP addresses are allocated. |
| static global-ip |
Sets up a single static translation. This argument establishes the
globally unique IP address assigned to a host on the outside network by
its owner. It was allocated from globally routable network space. |
| local-ip |
Sets up a single static translation. This argument establishes the
local IP address of an outside host as it appears to the inside world. The
address was allocated from address space routable on the inside (RFC 1918,
perhaps). |
To define a pool of IP addresses for Network Address Translation (NAT), use
the ip nat pool global configuration command. To remove one or more
addresses from the pool, use the no form of this command.
ip nat pool name start-ip end-ip {netmask
netmask | prefix-length prefix-length}
[type rotary]
no ip nat pool name start-ip end-ip {netmask netmask |
prefix-length prefix-length}
[type rotary]
| name |
Name of the pool. |
| start-ip |
Starting IP address that defines the range of addresses in the address
pool. |
| end-ip |
Ending IP address that defines the range of addresses in the address
pool. |
| netmask netmask |
Network mask that indicates which address bits belong to the network
and subnetwork fields and which bits belong to the host field. Specify the
netmask of the network to which the pool addresses belong. |
| prefix-length prefix-length |
Number that indicates how many bits of the netmask are ones (how many
bits of the address indicate network). Specify the netmask of the network
to which the pool addresses belong. |
| type rotary |
(Optional) Indicates that the range of address in the address pool
identify real, inside hosts among which TCP load distribution will occur.
|
To change the amount of time after which Network Address Translation (NAT)
translations time out, use the ip nat translation global configuration
command. To disable the timeout, use the no form of this command.
ip nat translation {timeout | udp-timeout | dns-timeout
| tcp-timeout | finrst-timeout}
seconds
no ip nat translation {timeout | udp-timeout | dns-timeout | tcp-timeout |
finrst-timeout}
| timeout |
Specifies that the timeout value applies to dynamic translations
except for overload translations. Default is 86400 seconds (24 hours).
|
| udp-timeout |
Specifies that the timeout value applies to the UDP port. Default is
300 seconds (5 minutes). |
| dns-timeout |
Specifies that the timeout value applies to connections to the Domain
Naming System (DNS). Default is 60 seconds. |
| tcp-timeout |
Specifies that the timeout value applies to the TCP port. Default is
86400 seconds (24 hours). |
| finrst-timeout |
Specifies that the timeout value applies to Finish and Reset TCP
packets, which terminate a connection. Default is 60 seconds. |
| seconds |
Number of seconds after which the specified port translation times
out. Default values are listed in the Default section. |
To specify the format in which netmasks are displayed in show
command output, use the ip netmask-format line configuration command.
To restore the default display format, use the no form of this command.
ip netmask-format {bitcount | decimal |
hexadecimal}
no ip netmask-format [bitcount | decimal | hexadecimal]
| bitcount |
Addresses are followed by a slash and the total number of bits in the
netmask. For example, 131.108.11.0/24 indicates that the netmask is 24
bits. |
| decimal |
Network masks are displayed in dotted decimal notation (for example,
255.255.255.0). |
| hexadecimal |
Network masks are displayed in hexadecimal format, as indicated by the
leading 0X (for example, 0XFFFFFF00). |
To configure the authentication string for an interface using Next Hop
Resolution Protocol (NHRP), use the ip nhrp authentication interface
configuration command. To remove the authentication string, use the no
form of this command.
ip nhrp authentication string
no ip nhrp authentication [string]
| string |
Authentication string configured for the source and destination
stations that controls whether NHRP stations allow intercommunication. The
string can be up to 8 characters long. |
To change the number of seconds that NHRP nonbroadcast, multiaccess (NBMA)
addresses are advertised as valid in authoritative NHRP responses, use the
ip nhrp holdtime interface configuration command. To restore the default
value, use the no form of this command.
ip nhrp holdtime seconds-positive [seconds-negative]
no ip nhrp holdtime [seconds-positive [seconds-negative]]
| seconds-positive |
Time in seconds that NBMA addresses are advertised as valid in
positive authoritative NHRP responses. |
| seconds-negative |
(Optional) Time in seconds that NBMA addresses are advertised as valid
in negative authoritative NHRP responses. |
To control which IP packets can trigger sending a Next Hop Resolution
Protocol (NHRP) Request, use the ip nhrp interest interface
configuration command. To restore the default value, use the no form of
this command.
ip nhrp interest access-list-number
no ip nhrp interest [access-list-number]
| access-list-number |
Standard or extended IP access list number in the range 1 to 199. |
To statically configure the IP-to-NBMA address mapping of IP destinations
connected to a nonbroadcast, multiaccess (NBMA) network, use the ip nhrp
map interface configuration command. To remove the static entry from NHRP
cache, use the no form of this command.
ip nhrp map ip-address nbma-address
no ip nhrp map ip-address nbma-address
| ip-address |
IP address of the destinations reachable through the NBMA network.
This address is mapped to the NBMA address. |
| nbma-address |
NBMA address that is directly reachable through the NBMA network. The
address format varies depending on the medium you are using. For example,
ATM has an NSAP address, Ethernet has a MAC address, and SMDS has an E.164
address. This address is mapped to the IP address. |
To configure NBMA addresses used as destinations for broadcast or multicast
packets to be sent over a tunnel network, use the ip nhrp map multicast
interface configuration command. To remove the destinations, use the no
form of this command.
ip nhrp map multicast nbma-address
no ip nhrp map multicast nbma-address
| nbma-address |
Nonbroadcast, multiaccess (NBMA) address which is directly reachable
through the NBMA network. The address format varies depending on the
medium you are using. |
To change the maximum frequency at which NHRP packets can be sent, use the
ip nhrp max-send interface configuration command. To restore this
frequency to the default value, use the no form of this command.
ip nhrp max-send pkt-count every
interval
no ip nhrp max-send
| pkt-count |
Number of packets which can be transmitted in the range from 1 to
65535. Default is 5 packets. |
| every interval |
Time (in seconds) in the range from 10 to 65535. Default is
10 seconds. |
To enable the Next Hop Resolution Protocol (NHRP) on an interface, use the
ip nhrp network-id interface configuration command. To disable NHRP on
the interface, use the no form of this command.
ip nhrp network-id number
no ip nhrp network-id [number]
| number |
Globally unique, 32-bit network identifier for a nonbroadcast,
multiaccess (NBMA) network. The range is 1 to 4294967295. |
To specify the address of one or more NHRP Next Hop Servers, use the ip
nhrp nhs interface configuration command. To remove the address, use the
no form of this command.
ip nhrp nhs nhs-address [net-address [netmask]]
no ip nhrp nhs nhs-address [net-address [netmask]]
| nhs-address |
Address of the Next Hop Server being specified. |
| net-address |
(Optional) IP address of a network served by the Next Hop Server. |
| netmask |
(Optional) IP network mask to be associated with the net IP
address. The net IP address is logically ANDed with the mask. |
To re-enable the use of forward record and reverse record options in NHRP
Request and Reply packets, use the ip nhrp record interface
configuration command. To suppress the use of such options, use the no
form of this command.
ip nhrp record
no ip nhrp record
To designate which interface's primary IP address the Next Hop Server will
use in NHRP Reply packets when the NHRP requestor uses the Responder Address
option, use the ip nhrp responder interface configuration command. To
remove the designation, use the no form of this command.
ip nhrp responder type number
no ip nhrp responder [type] [number]
| type |
Interface type whose primary IP address is used when a Next Hop Server
complies with a Responder Address option (for example, serial,
tunnel). |
| number |
Interface number whose primary IP address is used when a Next Hop
Server complies with a Responder Address option. |
To configure the software so that NHRP is deferred until the system has
attempted to send data traffic to a particular destination multiple times, use
the ip nhrp use interface configuration command. To restore the default
value, use the no form of this command.
ip nhrp use usage-count
no ip nhrp use usage-count
| usage-count |
Packet count in the range from 1 to 65535. Default is 1. |
To enable the HP Probe Proxy support, which allows the Cisco IOS software
to respond to HP Probe Proxy Name requests, use the ip probe proxy
interface configuration command. To disable HP Probe Proxy, use the no
form of this command.
ip probe proxy
no ip probe proxy
To enable proxy ARP on an interface, use the ip proxy-arp interface
configuration command. To disable proxy ARP on the interface, use the no
form of this command.
ip proxy-arp
no ip proxy-arp
To enable the sending of redirect messages if the Cisco IOS software is
forced to resend a packet through the same interface on which it was received,
use the ip redirects interface configuration command. To disable the
sending of redirect messages, use the no form of this command.
ip redirects
no ip redirects
To enable IP routing, use the ip routing global configuration
command. To disable IP routing, use the no form of this command.
ip routing
no ip routing
To enable the use of subnet zero for interface addresses and routing
updates, use the ip subnet-zero global configuration command. To
restore the default, use the no form of this command.
ip subnet-zero
no ip subnet-zero
To enable IP processing on a serial interface without assigning an explicit
IP address to the interface, use the ip unnumbered interface
configuration command. To disable the IP processing on the interface,
use the no form of this command.
ip unnumbered type number
no ip unnumbered type number
| type number |
Type and number of another interface on which the router has an
assigned IP address. It cannot be another unnumbered interface. |
To check host reachability and network connectivity, use the ping
(IP packet internet groper function) privileged EXEC command.
ping [protocol] {host |
address}
| protocol |
(Optional) Protocol keyword. The default is IP. |
| host |
Host name of system to ping. |
| address |
IP address of system to ping. |
To check host reachability and network connectivity, use the ping
(IP packet internet groper function) user EXEC command.
ping [protocol] {host | address}
| protocol |
(Optional) Protocol keyword. The default is IP. |
| host |
Host name of system to ping. |
| address |
IP address of system to ping. |
To display the entries in the ARP table, use the show arp privileged
EXEC command.
show arp
To display the default domain name, the style of name lookup service, a
list of name server hosts, and the cached list of host names and addresses,
use the show hosts EXEC command.
show hosts
To display the IP addresses mapped to TCP ports (aliases) and SLIP
addresses, which are treated similarly to aliases, use the show ip aliases
EXEC command.
show ip aliases
To display the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) cache, where SLIP
addresses appear as permanent ARP table entries, use the show ip arp
EXEC command.
show ip arp [ip-address] [hostname] [mac-address]
[type number]
| ip-address |
(Optional) ARP entries matching this IP address are displayed. |
| hostname |
(Optional) Host name. |
| mac-address |
(Optional) 48-bit MAC address. |
| type number |
(Optional) ARP entries learned via this interface type and number are
displayed. |
To display the usability status of interfaces configured for IP, use the
show ip interface EXEC command.
show ip interface [type number]
| type |
(Optional) Interface type. |
| number |
(Optional) Interface number. |
To display IRDP values, use the show ip irdp EXEC command.
show ip irdp
To display the masks used for network addresses and the number of subnets
using each mask, use the show ip masks EXEC command.
show ip masks address
| address |
Network address for which a mask is required. |
To display Network Address Translation (NAT) statistics, use the show ip
nat statistics EXEC command.
show ip nat statistics
To display active Network Address Translation (NAT) translations, use the
show ip nat translations EXEC command.
show ip nat translations [verbose]
| verbose |
(Optional) Displays additional information for each translation table
entry, including how long ago the entry was created and used. |
To display the Next Hop Resolution Protocol (NHRP) cache, use the show
ip nhrp EXEC command.
show ip nhrp [dynamic | static] [type number]
| dynamic |
(Optional) Displays only the dynamic (learned) IP-to-NBMA address
cache entries. |
| static |
(Optional) Displays only the static IP-to-NBMA address entries in the
cache (configured through the ip nhrp map command). |
| type |
(Optional) Interface type about which to display the NHRP cache (for
example, atm, tunnel). |
| number |
(Optional) Interface number about which to display the NHRP cache.
|
To display Next Hop Resolution Protocol (NHRP) traffic statistics, use the
show ip nhrp traffic EXEC command.
show ip nhrp traffic
To display the address of a default gateway (router) and the address of
hosts for which a redirect has been received, use the show ip redirects
EXEC command.
show ip redirects
To specify the format in which netmasks are displayed in show
command output, use the term ip netmask-format EXEC command. To restore
the default display format, use the no form of this command.
term ip netmask-format {bitcount | decimal
| hexadecimal}
term no ip netmask-format [bitcount | decimal | hexadecimal]
| bitcount |
Addresses are followed by a slash and the total number of bits in the
netmask. For example, 131.108.11.55/24 indicates that the netmask is 24
bits. |
| decimal |
Netmasks are displayed in dotted decimal notation (for example,
255.255.255.0). |
| hexadecimal |
Netmasks are displayed in hexadecimal format, as indicated by the
leading 0X (for example, 0XFFFFFF00). |
To discover the routes the packets follow when traveling to their
destination from the router, use the trace privileged EXEC command.
trace [destination]
| destination |
(Optional) Destination address or host name on the command line. The
default parameters for the appropriate protocol are assumed and the
tracing action begins. |
To discover the routes the router packets follow when traveling to their
destination, use the trace user EXEC command.
trace ip destination
| destination |
Destination address or host name on the command line. The default
parameters for the appropriate protocol are assumed and the tracing action
begins. |
To set the encapsulation mode for the tunnel interface, use the tunnel
mode interface configuration command. To set to the default, use the no
form of this command.
tunnel mode {aurp | cayman | dvmrp | eon | gre ip
[multipoint] | nos}
no tunnel mode
| aurp |
AppleTalk Update-Based Routing Protocol (AURP). |
| cayman |
Cayman TunnelTalk AppleTalk encapsulation. |
| dvmrp |
Distance Vector Multicast Routing Protocol. |
| eon |
EON compatible CLNS tunnel. |
| gre ip |
Generic routing encapsulation (GRE)
protocol over IP. |
| multipoint |
(Optional) Enables a GRE tunnel to be used in a multipoint fashion.
Can be used with the gre ip keyword only, and requires the use of
the tunnel key command. |
| nos |
KA9Q/NOS compatible IP over IP. |