Dell 9.7(0.0) - Manual

Dell 9.7(0.0)

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Table of Contents:

  • Page 3 – Contents
  • Page 33 – Audience; Keyword; Related Documents
  • Page 34 – Accessing the Command Line
  • Page 35 – Navigating CLI Modes
  • Page 38 – The do Command
  • Page 39 – Undoing Commands
  • Page 42 – except; find
  • Page 43 – Multiple Users in Configuration Mode
  • Page 44 – Console Access; Serial Console
  • Page 45 – Accessing the Console Port; Pin Assignments; Default Configuration; Configuring a Host Name
  • Page 46 – hostname; Accessing the System Remotely; Accessing the Z9500 Remotely; Configure the Management Port IP Address
  • Page 47 – Configuring the Enable Password
  • Page 48 – Manage Configuration Files; File Storage; Copy Files to and from the System
  • Page 49 – Important Points to Remember
  • Page 50 – Save the Running-Configuration; Configure the Overload Bit for a Startup Scenario; Viewing Files
  • Page 51 – dir; Changes in Configuration Files
  • Page 52 – Enabling Software Features on Devices Using a Command
  • Page 53 – View Command History; Upgrading the Dell Networking OS
  • Page 55 – Configuring Privilege Levels; Creating a Custom Privilege Level
  • Page 56 – Allowing Access to CONFIGURATION Mode Commands; Allowing Access to the Following Modes
  • Page 58 – Applying a Privilege Level to a Username; Applying a Privilege Level to a Terminal Line; Configuring Logging
  • Page 59 – Audit and Security Logs; Enabling Audit and Security Logs
  • Page 60 – Displaying Audit and Security Logs; show logging auditlog; show logging; Clearing Audit Logs; Configuring Logging Format
  • Page 61 – Setting Up a Secure Connection to a Syslog Server
  • Page 62 – Log Messages in the Internal Buffer; Configuration Task List for System Log Management; Disabling System Logging
  • Page 63 – Sending System Messages to a Syslog Server; Configuring a UNIX System as a Syslog Server; Display the Logging Buffer and the Logging
  • Page 64 – Changing System Logging Settings
  • Page 65 – Configuring a UNIX Logging Facility Level
  • Page 66 – show running-config logging; Synchronizing Log Messages; Enabling Timestamp on Syslog Messages
  • Page 67 – File Transfer Services; Configuration Task List for File Transfer Services; Enabling the FTP Server
  • Page 68 – Configuring FTP Server Parameters; Configuring FTP Client Parameters
  • Page 69 – Terminal Lines; Denying and Permitting Access to a Terminal Line
  • Page 70 – Configuring Login Authentication for Terminal Lines
  • Page 71 – Setting Time Out of EXEC Privilege Mode; Using Telnet to Access Another Network Device; telnet
  • Page 72 – Lock CONFIGURATION Mode; Viewing the Configuration Lock Status
  • Page 73 – Recovering from a Forgotten Password on the Z9500; Ignoring the Startup Configuration and Booting from the
  • Page 74 – Recovering from a Failed Start on the Z9500; Restoring Factory-Default Settings
  • Page 75 – Restoring Factory-Default Boot Environment Variables
  • Page 79 – The Port-Authentication Process
  • Page 81 – EAP over RADIUS; RADIUS Attributes for 802.1 Support; Related Configuration Tasks
  • Page 83 – dot1x authentication; Dot1x Status: Enable
  • Page 84 – Configuring Request Identity Re-Transmissions; Configuring a Quiet Period after a Failed Authentication
  • Page 85 – Quiet Period: 120 seconds; Forcibly Authorizing or Unauthorizing a Port
  • Page 86 – Re-Authenticating a Port
  • Page 87 – Configuring Timeouts
  • Page 88 – Supplicant Timeout: 15 seconds; Configuring Dynamic VLAN Assignment with Port
  • Page 89 – Guest and Authentication-Fail VLANs
  • Page 90 – Configuring a Guest VLAN; Configuring an Authentication-Fail VLAN
  • Page 91 – Guest VLAN: Disabled
  • Page 93 – CAM Usage
  • Page 94 – User-Configurable CAM Allocation; Test CAM Usage; Implementing ACLs
  • Page 95 – ACLs and VLANs; ACL Optimization; Keyword to Determine ACL Sequence
  • Page 96 – IP Fragment Handling; IP Fragments ACL Examples; deny ip any; Layer 4 ACL Rules Examples; fragments
  • Page 97 – deny ip any any fragment; deny ip any any log; Configure a Standard IP ACL
  • Page 99 – Configuring a Standard IP ACL Filter
  • Page 100 – Configure an Extended IP ACL; Configuring Filters with a Sequence Number; Configure Filters, TCP Packets
  • Page 101 – seq; Configuring Filters Without a Sequence Number
  • Page 102 – Configure Layer 2 and Layer 3 ACLs
  • Page 103 – Using ACL VLAN Groups; Guidelines for Configuring ACL VLAN Groups
  • Page 104 – Configuring an ACL VLAN Group
  • Page 105 – Applying an IP ACL to an Interface
  • Page 106 – Configure Ingress ACLs; ip access-group abcd in
  • Page 107 – Configure Egress ACLs; ip access-group abcd out
  • Page 108 – Counting ACL Hits; IP Prefix Lists
  • Page 109 – Creating a Prefix List
  • Page 110 – Creating a Prefix List Without a Sequence Number
  • Page 111 – Viewing Prefix Lists; Applying a Prefix List for Route Redistribution
  • Page 112 – Applying a Filter to a Prefix List (OSPF)
  • Page 113 – ACL Resequencing; Resequencing an ACL or Prefix List
  • Page 114 – resequence access-list ipv4 test 2 2
  • Page 115 – Route Maps; Implementation Information; Configuration Task List for Route Maps
  • Page 116 – Creating a Route Map
  • Page 117 – Configure Route Map Filters; match
  • Page 118 – Configuring Match Routes
  • Page 119 – Configuring Set Conditions
  • Page 120 – Configure a Route Map for Route Redistribution
  • Page 121 – Configure a Route Map for Route Tagging; redistribute; Continue Clause; continue
  • Page 123 – Enhanced Behavior of the stop bmp Command; Removal of User-Defined String Parameter in the reload-
  • Page 124 – How BFD Works
  • Page 125 – BFD Packet Format
  • Page 128 – Session State Changes
  • Page 130 – Configure BFD for Static Routes; show bfd neighbors
  • Page 131 – Changing Static Route Session Parameters; Disabling BFD for Static Routes; Configure BFD for OSPF
  • Page 133 – Establishing Sessions with OSPF Neighbors
  • Page 134 – Changing OSPFv3 Session Parameters; Disabling BFD for OSPFv3
  • Page 135 – Configure BFD for OSPFv3
  • Page 136 – Establishing Sessions with OSPFv3 Neighbors; Configure BFD for IS-IS
  • Page 137 – Establishing Sessions with IS-IS Neighbors
  • Page 138 – Disabling BFD for IS-IS
  • Page 139 – Configure BFD for BGP; Prerequisites; Establishing Sessions with BGP Neighbors
  • Page 141 – Disabling BFD for BGP
  • Page 142 – Use BFD in a BGP Peer Group
  • Page 145 – BFD is enabled, Interval 100 Min_rx 100 Multiplier 3 Role Active; Neighbor is using BGP global mode BFD configuration
  • Page 146 – Neighbor is using BGP neighbor mode BFD configuration; Neighbor is using BGP peer-group mode BFD configuration; Configure BFD for VRRP
  • Page 147 – Establishing Sessions with All VRRP Neighbors; Establishing VRRP Sessions on VRRP Neighbors
  • Page 149 – Disabling BFD for VRRP; Configuring Protocol Liveness
  • Page 152 – Sessions and Peers
  • Page 153 – Establish a Session; Peer Groups; Route Reflectors
  • Page 154 – Communities; BGP Attributes
  • Page 155 – Best Path Selection Criteria
  • Page 156 – Best Path Selection Details
  • Page 159 – Origin
  • Page 160 – AS Path; Path; Next Hop; Multiprotocol BGP
  • Page 161 – Implement BGP; Advertise IGP Cost as MED for Redistributed Routes
  • Page 163 – Dynamic AS Number Notation Application; bgp asnotation; bgp asnotation asdot; bgp asnotation asplain
  • Page 164 – no bgp asnotation; AS Number Migration
  • Page 167 – Configuration Information
  • Page 168 – Enabling BGP
  • Page 169 – show ip bgp summary
  • Page 172 – Configuring AS4 Number Representations
  • Page 173 – Configuring Peer Groups
  • Page 175 – neighbor zanzibar peer-group
  • Page 176 – Configuring BGP Fast Fail-Over
  • Page 178 – Configuring Passive Peering
  • Page 179 – Maintaining Existing AS Numbers During an AS Migration
  • Page 180 – Allowing an AS Number to Appear in its Own AS Path; Enabling Neighbor Graceful Restart
  • Page 181 – Filtering on an AS-Path Attribute
  • Page 182 – show ip bgp paths
  • Page 183 – Regular Expressions as Filters
  • Page 184 – Redistributing Routes
  • Page 185 – Enabling Additional Paths; Configuring IP Community Lists
  • Page 186 – show ip community-lists
  • Page 187 – Configuring an IP Extended Community List; show ip extcommunity-lists
  • Page 188 – Filtering Routes with Community Lists; Manipulating the COMMUNITY Attribute
  • Page 189 – show ip bgp community
  • Page 190 – Changing MED Attributes; Changing the LOCAL_PREFERENCE Attribute
  • Page 191 – Changing the NEXT_HOP Attribute
  • Page 192 – Changing the WEIGHT Attribute; Enabling Multipath
  • Page 195 – Configuring BGP Route Reflectors
  • Page 196 – Aggregating Routes; Configuring BGP Confederations
  • Page 197 – Enabling Route Flap Dampening
  • Page 201 – Route Map Continue
  • Page 202 – Enabling MBGP Configurations
  • Page 203 – BGP Regular Expression Optimization; Debugging BGP
  • Page 204 – Storing Last and Bad PDUs; show ip bgp neighbor; Received 1404 messages, 0 in queue
  • Page 205 – Capturing PDUs
  • Page 206 – PDU Counters
  • Page 216 – CAM Allocation
  • Page 218 – View CAM-ACL Settings
  • Page 219 – View CAM Usage
  • Page 220 – Return to the Default CAM Configuration; default
  • Page 221 – Applications for CAM Profiling; LAG Hashing; Configuring UFT Modes
  • Page 223 – Protocol-based Control Plane Policing
  • Page 224 – Queue-based Control Plane Policing
  • Page 225 – CoPP Example
  • Page 226 – Configure Control Plane Policing; Configuring CoPP for Protocols
  • Page 227 – Examples of Configuring CoPP for Protocols
  • Page 229 – Configuring CoPP for CPU Queues; Examples of Configuring CoPP for CPU Queues
  • Page 230 – Displaying CoPP Configuration; Viewing Queue Rates
  • Page 232 – Viewing Complete Protocol-Queue Mapping
  • Page 234 – Troubleshooting CoPP Operation; Enabling CPU Traffic Statistics; Viewing CPU Traffic Statistics; Troubleshooting CPU Packet Loss
  • Page 237 – Viewing Per-Protocol CoPP Counters
  • Page 239 – Viewing Per-Queue CoPP Counters
  • Page 241 – Ethernet Enhancements in Data Center Bridging
  • Page 242 – Priority-Based Flow Control
  • Page 243 – Enhanced Transmission Selection
  • Page 244 – Data Center Bridging Exchange Protocol (DCBx)
  • Page 245 – Data Center Bridging in a Traffic Flow; Enabling Data Center Bridging
  • Page 246 – QoS dot1p Traffic Classification and Queue Assignment; SNMP Support for PFC and Buffer Statistics Tracking
  • Page 247 – DCB Maps and its Attributes; DCB Map: Configuration Procedure
  • Page 248 – Applying a DCB Map on a Port
  • Page 249 – Configuring PFC without a DCB Map; Configuring Lossless Queues
  • Page 250 – Data Center Bridging: Default Configuration
  • Page 251 – Configuring PFC and ETS in a DCB Map; PFC Configuration Notes
  • Page 252 – PFC Prerequisites and Restrictions
  • Page 253 – ETS Prerequisites and Restrictions
  • Page 254 – Configuring Priority-Based Flow Control
  • Page 256 – Configure Enhanced Transmission Selection; Creating an ETS Priority Group
  • Page 257 – ETS Operation with DCBx
  • Page 258 – Configuring Bandwidth Allocation for DCBx CIN
  • Page 259 – Applying the DCB Policies on Linecard; Applying DCB Policies on SFM Ports; Configure a DCBx Operation
  • Page 260 – DCBx Operation
  • Page 263 – Propagation of DCB Information; Auto-Detection and Manual Configuration of the DCBx Version
  • Page 265 – DCBx Example; DCBx Prerequisites and Restrictions
  • Page 267 – Configuring DCBx Globally on the Switch
  • Page 270 – Verifying the DCB Configuration
  • Page 272 – show interface pfc summary
  • Page 276 – show interface ets detail
  • Page 280 – show interface DCBx detail
  • Page 281 – Generation of PFC for a Priority for Untagged Packets
  • Page 282 – PFC and ETS Configuration Examples
  • Page 284 – PFC and ETS Configuration Command Examples; Using PFC and ETS to Manage Converged Ethernet Traffic; Hierarchical Scheduling in ETS Output Policies
  • Page 285 – Priority-Based Flow Control Using Dynamic Buffer; Pause and Resume of Traffic
  • Page 286 – Buffer Sizes for Lossless or PFC Packets; Configuring the Dynamic Buffer Method
  • Page 293 – Offline Diagnostics
  • Page 295 – Examples of Running Offline Diagnostics
  • Page 301 – show diag
  • Page 302 – TRACE Logs
  • Page 303 – Last Restart Reason; Line Card Restart Causes and Reasons; show hardware Commands
  • Page 305 – Environmental Monitoring; Display Power Supply Status
  • Page 306 – Display Fan Status; Display Transceiver Type
  • Page 307 – Pluggable media present, QSFP type is 40GBASE-SR4
  • Page 308 – Recognize an Over-Temperature Condition
  • Page 309 – Troubleshoot an Over-Temperature Condition
  • Page 311 – Troubleshooting Packet Loss; Displaying Drop Counters
  • Page 313 – Displaying Dataplane Statistics
  • Page 314 – Displaying Line-Card Counters
  • Page 315 – Accessing Application Core Dumps
  • Page 316 – Mini Core Dumps; Full Kernel Core Dumps
  • Page 317 – Enabling TCP Dumps
  • Page 318 – Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol; DHCP Packet Format and Options
  • Page 320 – Assign an IP Address using DHCP
  • Page 322 – Configure the System to be a DHCP Server; Configuring the Server for Automatic Address Allocation
  • Page 323 – Configuration Tasks
  • Page 324 – Specifying a Default Gateway; Configure a Method of Hostname Resolution; Using DNS for Address Resolution; Using NetBIOS WINS for Address Resolution
  • Page 325 – Creating Manual Binding Entries; Debugging the DHCP Server
  • Page 326 – Configure the System to be a Relay Agent
  • Page 327 – show ip interface
  • Page 328 – Configure the System to be a DHCP Client; DHCP Client on a Management Interface
  • Page 329 – DHCP Client Operation with Other Features; VLAN and Port Channels; Configure Secure DHCP
  • Page 331 – Enabling DHCP Snooping; Enabling IPv6 DHCP Snooping
  • Page 332 – Clearing the Binding Table; show ip dhcp snooping
  • Page 333 – Displaying the Contents of the DHCPv6 Binding Table; show ipv6 dhcp snooping binding; Debugging the IPv6 DHCP
  • Page 334 – IPv6 DHCP Snooping MAC-Address Verification; Drop DHCP Packets on Snooped VLANs Only; Dynamic ARP Inspection
  • Page 335 – Configuring Dynamic ARP Inspection
  • Page 336 – Bypassing the ARP Inspection
  • Page 337 – Enabling IP Source Address Validation; DHCP MAC Source Address Validation; Enabling IP+MAC Source Address Validation
  • Page 338 – Viewing the Number of SAV Dropped Packets; Clearing the Number of SAV Dropped Packets
  • Page 339 – ECMP for Flow-Based Affinity; Enabling Deterministic ECMP Next Hop; Configuring the Hash Algorithm Seed
  • Page 340 – Link Bundle Monitoring; Managing ECMP Group Paths
  • Page 341 – Creating an ECMP Group Bundle; Modifying the ECMP Group Threshold
  • Page 342 – ECMP Support in L3 Host and LPM Tables
  • Page 344 – Fibre Channel over Ethernet; Ensure Robustness in a Converged Ethernet Network
  • Page 346 – FIP Snooping on Ethernet Bridges
  • Page 348 – Using FIP Snooping; FIP Snooping Prerequisites
  • Page 350 – Enabling the FCoE Transit Feature; Enable FIP Snooping on VLANs
  • Page 351 – FIP Snooping Restrictions; Configuring FIP Snooping
  • Page 353 – FCoE Transit Configuration Example
  • Page 354 – Displaying FIP Snooping Information
  • Page 356 – show fip-snooping sessions; show fip-snooping enode
  • Page 357 – show fip-snooping fcf
  • Page 358 – show fip-snooping statistics
  • Page 362 – Enabling FIPS Mode
  • Page 363 – Monitoring FIPS Mode Status; show fips status; Disabling FIPS Mode
  • Page 365 – Flex Hash Capability Overview; Configuring the Flex Hash Mechanism
  • Page 366 – RDMA Over Converged Ethernet (RoCE) Overview
  • Page 367 – Preserving 802.1Q VLAN Tag Value for Lite Subinterfaces
  • Page 368 – Protocol Overview
  • Page 369 – Ring Status; Ring Checking
  • Page 370 – Multiple FRRP Rings; Member VLAN Spanning Two Rings Connected by One Switch; Important FRRP Points
  • Page 372 – Creating the FRRP Group
  • Page 373 – Configuring the Control VLAN
  • Page 374 – Configuring and Adding the Member VLANs
  • Page 375 – Setting the FRRP Timers
  • Page 376 – Troubleshooting FRRP; Configuration Checks; Sample Configuration and Topology
  • Page 380 – Configure GVRP
  • Page 381 – Enabling GVRP Globally; Enabling GVRP on a Layer 2 Interface
  • Page 382 – gvrp registration; Configure a GARP Timer; garp timer
  • Page 384 – Internet Group Management Protocol; IGMP Implementation Information; IGMP Version 2
  • Page 385 – Join a Multicast Group; Sending an Unsolicited IGMP Report
  • Page 386 – IGMP Version 3
  • Page 387 – Joining and Filtering Groups and Sources
  • Page 388 – Leaving and Staying in Groups
  • Page 389 – Configure IGMP
  • Page 390 – Viewing IGMP Enabled Interfaces; show ip igmp interface; Selecting an IGMP Version; ip igmp version
  • Page 391 – IGMP version is 3; Viewing IGMP Groups; show ip igmp groups; Adjusting Timers
  • Page 392 – Adjusting the IGMP Querier Timeout Value; Configuring a Static IGMP Group
  • Page 393 – Enabling IGMP Immediate-Leave; IGMP Snooping; IGMP Snooping Implementation Information
  • Page 394 – ip igmp snooping enable; Removing a Group-Port Association
  • Page 395 – Specifying a Port as Connected to a Multicast Router; Configuring the Switch as Querier; Adjusting the Last Member Query Interval
  • Page 397 – Basic Interface Configuration
  • Page 398 – Interface Types; View Basic Interface Information
  • Page 399 – Show
  • Page 400 – Enabling a Physical Interface
  • Page 401 – Physical Interfaces; Port Pipes
  • Page 402 – Configuration Task List for Physical Interfaces; Overview of Layer Modes
  • Page 405 – Configuring EIS
  • Page 406 – Management Interfaces; Configuring a Dedicated Management Interface
  • Page 407 – Configuring a Management Interface on an Ethernet Port
  • Page 408 – show interface; show ip route; VLAN Interfaces
  • Page 409 – Loopback Interfaces; Null Interfaces
  • Page 410 – Port Channel Interfaces; Port Channel Definition and Standards
  • Page 411 – 0/40 Gbps Interfaces in Port Channels; Configuration Tasks for Port Channel Interfaces
  • Page 412 – Creating a Port Channel; Adding a Physical Interface to a Port Channel
  • Page 413 – show interfaces port-channel
  • Page 414 – Reassigning an Interface to a New Port Channel
  • Page 415 – Configuring the Minimum Oper Up Links in a Port Channel; Adding or Removing a Port Channel from a VLAN
  • Page 416 – Assigning an IP Address to a Port Channel
  • Page 417 – Load-Balancing Methods; Changing the Hash Algorithm
  • Page 418 – Bulk Configuration; Interface Range; Bulk Configuration Examples
  • Page 419 – Create a Single-Range; Create a Multiple-Range; Exclude Duplicate Entries; Exclude a Smaller Port Range; Overlap Port Ranges
  • Page 420 – Commas; Add Ranges; Interface Range Enhancements; Defining Interface Range Macros
  • Page 421 – Define the Interface Range; define interface-range; Choosing an Interface-Range Macro; Monitoring and Maintaining Interfaces; monitor interface
  • Page 422 – Displaying Traffic Statistics on HiGig Ports
  • Page 424 – Guidelines for Monitoring HiGig Link-Bundles
  • Page 425 – Enabling HiGig Link-Bundle Monitoring; Fanning out 40G Ports Dynamically
  • Page 426 – Splitting QSFP Ports to SFP+ Ports; Converting a QSFP or QSFP+ Port to an SFP or SFP+ Port
  • Page 427 – Example Scenarios
  • Page 431 – Link Dampening
  • Page 432 – show interfaces dampening
  • Page 433 – Clearing Dampening Counters; clear dampening; Link Dampening Support for XML; Using Ethernet Pause Frames for Flow Control
  • Page 434 – Enabling Pause Frames
  • Page 435 – Configure the MTU Size on an Interface
  • Page 436 – Auto-Negotiation on Ethernet Interfaces; Set Auto-Negotiation Options; negotiation auto; mode Specify autoneg mode
  • Page 437 – View Advanced Interface Information; Configuring the Interface Sampling Size
  • Page 439 – Dynamic Counters; Clearing Interface Counters
  • Page 440 – clear counters
  • Page 442 – Configuring IPSec
  • Page 443 – IP Addresses; Configuration Tasks for IP Addresses
  • Page 444 – show config
  • Page 445 – Configuring Static Routes; show ip route static
  • Page 446 – Configure Static Routes for the Management Interface; show ip management-route; Enabling Directed Broadcast
  • Page 447 – Resolution of Host Names; Enabling Dynamic Resolution of Host Names; show hosts
  • Page 448 – Configuring DNS with Traceroute; traceroute
  • Page 449 – ARP; Configuration Tasks for ARP
  • Page 450 – Configuring Static ARP Entries; show arp; Enabling Proxy ARP
  • Page 451 – ARP Learning via Gratuitous ARP
  • Page 452 – Configuring ARP Retries
  • Page 453 – Enabling ICMP Unreachable Messages
  • Page 454 – UDP Helper; Configure UDP Helper; Enabling UDP Helper
  • Page 455 – Configuring a Broadcast Address; Configurations Using UDP Helper; UDP Helper with Broadcast-All Addresses
  • Page 456 – UDP Helper with Subnet Broadcast Addresses
  • Page 457 – UDP Helper with Configured Broadcast Addresses; UDP Helper with No Configured Broadcast Addresses
  • Page 458 – Troubleshooting UDP Helper; debug ip dhcp
  • Page 459 – Extended Address Space
  • Page 460 – IPv6 Headers
  • Page 461 – IPv6 Header Fields
  • Page 462 – Extension Header Fields
  • Page 463 – IPv6 Addressing
  • Page 464 – Static and Dynamic Addressing
  • Page 465 – IPv6 Implementation on the Dell Networking OS
  • Page 467 – Configuring the LPM Table for IPv6 Extended Prefixes; Path MTU Discovery
  • Page 468 – IPv6 Neighbor Discovery
  • Page 469 – IPv6 Neighbor Discovery of MTU Packets; Configuring the IPv6 Recursive DNS Server
  • Page 470 – Debugging IPv6 RDNSS Information Sent to the Host; Displaying IPv6 RDNSS Information
  • Page 471 – Secure Shell (SSH) Over an IPv6 Transport; Configuration Tasks for IPv6
  • Page 472 – Adjusting Your CAM Profile; Assigning an IPv6 Address to an Interface
  • Page 473 – Assigning a Static IPv6 Route
  • Page 474 – Configuring Telnet with IPv6; SNMP over IPv6; Displaying IPv6 Information; show ipv6
  • Page 475 – Displaying an IPv6 Configuration; show ipv6 interface; Displaying IPv6 Routes
  • Page 477 – Displaying the Running Configuration for an Interface; show running-config interface; Clearing IPv6 Routes
  • Page 478 – iSCSI Optimization Overview
  • Page 480 – Default iSCSI Optimization Values; iSCSI Optimization Prerequisites; Configuring iSCSI Optimization
  • Page 483 – Displaying iSCSI Optimization Information; show iscsi
  • Page 484 – Enable and Disable iSCSI Optimization
  • Page 486 – Detection and Auto-Configuration for Dell EqualLogic; Configuring Detection and Ports for Dell Compellent
  • Page 487 – Application of Quality of Service to iSCSI Traffic Flows
  • Page 488 – IS-IS Protocol Overview
  • Page 489 – Transition Mode
  • Page 490 – Graceful Restart; Timers
  • Page 492 – Configuration Tasks for IS-IS
  • Page 494 – show isis traffic
  • Page 496 – Configuring IS-IS Graceful Restart
  • Page 497 – show isis graceful-restart detail; show isis interface
  • Page 498 – Changing LSP Attributes
  • Page 499 – Configuring the IS-IS Metric Style
  • Page 500 – Configuring the IS-IS Cost
  • Page 501 – Configuring the Distance of a Route; show isis database
  • Page 503 – Applying IPv6 Routes
  • Page 504 – Redistributing IPv4 Routes
  • Page 505 – Redistributing IPv6 Routes
  • Page 506 – Configuring Authentication Passwords; Setting the Overload Bit
  • Page 507 – OL
  • Page 508 – Configure Metric Values
  • Page 511 – Leaks from One Level to Another
  • Page 514 – Introduction to Dynamic LAGs and LACP
  • Page 515 – LACP Modes; Configuring LACP Commands
  • Page 516 – LACP Configuration Tasks; Creating a LAG
  • Page 517 – show lacp
  • Page 518 – Monitoring and Debugging LACP; Shared LAG State Tracking
  • Page 519 – Configuring Shared LAG State Tracking
  • Page 520 – Important Points about Shared LAG State Tracking
  • Page 521 – LACP Basic Configuration Example; Configure a LAG on ALPHA
  • Page 529 – Manage the MAC Address Table; Clearing the MAC Address Table; Setting the Aging Time for Dynamic Entries
  • Page 530 – MAC Learning Limit
  • Page 531 – mac learning-limit Dynamic
  • Page 534 – NIC Teaming
  • Page 535 – Configure Redundant Pairs
  • Page 537 – Important Points about Configuring Redundant Pairs; Changed interface state to down: Te; TengigabitEthernet 3/42 unassigned NO Manual up down
  • Page 538 – TengigabitEthernet 3/42 unassigned YES Manual up up; Far-End Failure Detection
  • Page 539 – FEFD State Changes
  • Page 540 – Configuring FEFD
  • Page 541 – show fefd; Enabling FEFD on an Interface
  • Page 542 – Debugging FEFD; debug fefd
  • Page 544 – Protocol Data Units
  • Page 545 – Optional TLVs; Management TLVs; Organizationally Specific TLVs
  • Page 546 – IEEE Organizationally Specific TLVs
  • Page 548 – TIA Organizationally Specific TLVs
  • Page 549 – LLDP-MED Capabilities TLV
  • Page 550 – LLDP-MED Network Policies TLV
  • Page 552 – Extended Power via MDI TLV; Configure LLDP
  • Page 553 – CONFIGURATION versus INTERFACE Configurations; protocol lldp
  • Page 554 – Enabling LLDP; Disabling and Undoing LLDP; Enabling LLDP on Management Ports; Disabling and Undoing LLDP on Management Ports
  • Page 556 – Viewing the LLDP Configuration
  • Page 557 – Viewing Information Advertised by Adjacent LLDP Agents
  • Page 558 – Configuring LLDPDU Intervals; mode tx; Configuring Transmit and Receive Mode
  • Page 559 – Configuring a Time to Live; multiplier
  • Page 560 – Debugging LLDP
  • Page 561 – Relevant Management Objects
  • Page 567 – NLB Unicast and Multicast Modes; NLB Unicast Mode Example
  • Page 568 – NLB Multicast Mode Example; NLB Benefits; NLB Restrictions
  • Page 569 – NLB VLAN Flooding; Configuring NLB on a Switch
  • Page 570 – Multicast Source Discovery Protocol
  • Page 576 – Enable MSDP
  • Page 577 – Manage the Source-Active Cache; Viewing the Source-Active Cache; show ip msdp sa-cache
  • Page 578 – Limiting the Source-Active Cache; Clearing the Source-Active Cache; Accept Source-Active Messages that Fail the RFP Check
  • Page 582 – Specifying Source-Active Messages
  • Page 583 – Limiting the Source-Active Messages from a Peer; Preventing MSDP from Caching a Local Source
  • Page 584 – Preventing MSDP from Caching a Remote Source
  • Page 585 – Preventing MSDP from Advertising a Local Source
  • Page 586 – Shutdown; Clearing Peer Statistics
  • Page 587 – clear ip msdp peer; Debugging MSDP; debug ip msdp; MSDP with Anycast RP
  • Page 589 – Configuring Anycast RP; Reducing Source-Active Message Flooding; Specifying the RP Address Used in SA Messages
  • Page 592 – MSDP Sample Configurations
  • Page 596 – Spanning Tree Variations; Configure Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol
  • Page 597 – Enable Multiple Spanning Tree Globally; Adding and Removing Interfaces
  • Page 598 – root Forwarding
  • Page 599 – Influencing MSTP Root Selection; msti 2 bridge-priority 0; Interoperate with Non-Dell Bridges
  • Page 600 – Changing the Region Name or Revision; Modifying Global Parameters
  • Page 601 – Modifying the Interface Parameters
  • Page 602 – Configuring an EdgePort
  • Page 603 – Flush MAC Addresses after a Topology Change
  • Page 604 – Router 1 Running-Configuration
  • Page 606 – Example Running-Configuration
  • Page 607 – Debugging and Verifying MSTP Configurations
  • Page 608 – (Indicates MSTP routers are in
  • Page 610 – Enabling IP Multicast; Multicast with ECMP
  • Page 612 – First Packet Forwarding for Lossless Multicast; IPv4 Multicast Policies; Limiting the Number of Multicast Routes
  • Page 613 – Preventing a Host from Joining a Group
  • Page 616 – Rate Limiting IGMP Join Requests; Preventing a PIM Router from Forming an Adjacency; Preventing a Source from Registering with the RP
  • Page 619 – Preventing a PIM Router from Processing a Join
  • Page 620 – Open Shortest Path First (OSPFv2 and
  • Page 621 – Area Types
  • Page 624 – Designated and Backup Designated Routers
  • Page 625 – LSA Throttling
  • Page 627 – OSPF Implementation
  • Page 628 – Processing SNMP and Sending SNMP Traps; RFC-2328 Compliant OSPF Flooding; Enabling RFC-2328 Compliant OSPF Flooding
  • Page 630 – Configuration Task List for OSPFv2 (OSPF for IPv4); Enabling OSPFv2
  • Page 631 – Assigning a Router ID
  • Page 635 – Configuring Stub Areas; show ip ospf database database-summary
  • Page 637 – Enabling Fast-Convergence
  • Page 638 – Convergence Level 2; Changing OSPFv2 Parameters on Interfaces
  • Page 640 – Enabling OSPFv2 Authentication; Configuring Virtual Links
  • Page 641 – Creating Filter Routes
  • Page 642 – Applying Prefix Lists
  • Page 643 – Troubleshooting OSPFv2
  • Page 645 – Sample Configurations for OSPFv2; Basic OSPFv2 Router Topology
  • Page 646 – Configuration Task List for OSPFv3 (OSPF for IPv6)
  • Page 647 – Assigning Area ID on an Interface
  • Page 648 – Assigning OSPFv3 Process ID and Router ID Globally; Configuring Passive-Interface
  • Page 650 – OSPFv3 Authentication Using IPsec
  • Page 651 – OSPFv3 Authentication Using IPsec: Configuration Notes
  • Page 652 – Configuring IPsec Authentication on an Interface; Configuring IPsec Encryption on an Interface
  • Page 653 – Configuring IPSec Authentication for an OSPFv3 Area
  • Page 654 – Configuring IPsec Encryption for an OSPFv3 Area
  • Page 655 – Displaying OSPFv3 IPsec Security Policies; show crypto ipsec
  • Page 657 – Troubleshooting OSPFv3; Viewing Summary Information
  • Page 659 – Installing a License
  • Page 661 – yes
  • Page 662 – Displaying License Information
  • Page 664 – Requesting Multicast Traffic
  • Page 665 – Refuse Multicast Traffic; Important Point to Remember
  • Page 668 – Configuring a Static Rendezvous Point
  • Page 669 – Overriding Bootstrap Router Updates; Configuring a Designated Router
  • Page 670 – Creating Multicast Boundaries and Domains; Enabling PIM-SM Graceful Restart
  • Page 672 – Use PIM-SSM with IGMP Version 2 Hosts
  • Page 673 – Configuring PIM-SSM with IGMPv2
  • Page 675 – Overview
  • Page 677 – Implementing Policy-based Routing with Dell; Configuration Task List for Policy-based Routing
  • Page 683 – Sample Configuration
  • Page 684 – Create the Redirect-List GOLD; Assign Redirect-List GOLD to Interface 2/11
  • Page 685 – View Redirect-List GOLD
  • Page 686 – Local Port Monitoring
  • Page 688 – Configuring Port Monitoring; monitor session 0
  • Page 689 – Remote Port Mirroring; Remote Port Mirroring Example
  • Page 690 – Configuring Remote Port Mirroring; Configuration Notes
  • Page 691 – Restrictions
  • Page 692 – Displaying a Remote-Port Mirroring Configuration; Configuring Remote Port Monitoring
  • Page 696 – Encapsulated Remote-Port Monitoring
  • Page 698 – Private VLAN Concepts
  • Page 699 – Using the Private VLAN Commands
  • Page 700 – Configuration Task List; Creating PVLAN ports
  • Page 701 – switchport mode private-vlan; Creating a Primary VLAN
  • Page 702 – Creating a Community VLAN
  • Page 703 – Creating an Isolated VLAN
  • Page 704 – Private VLAN Configuration Example
  • Page 705 – Inspecting the Private VLAN Configuration
  • Page 706 – Isolated
  • Page 710 – Influencing PVST+ Root Selection
  • Page 711 – show spanning-tree pvst vlan
  • Page 712 – Modifying Global PVST+ Parameters
  • Page 713 – Modifying Interface PVST+ Parameters
  • Page 715 – Enabling PVST+ Extend System ID
  • Page 716 – PVST+ Sample Configurations
  • Page 719 – Port-Based QoS Configurations; Setting dot1p Priorities for Incoming Traffic
  • Page 720 – Honoring dot1p Priorities on Ingress Traffic; Priority-Tagged Frames on the Default VLAN; Configuring Port-Based Rate Policing
  • Page 721 – Configuring Port-Based Rate Shaping; rate shape
  • Page 722 – Policy-Based QoS Configurations; Classify Traffic
  • Page 723 – Creating a Layer 3 Class Map
  • Page 724 – Creating a Layer 2 Class Map; Applying Layer 2 Match Criteria on a Layer 3 Interface
  • Page 725 – Applying DSCP and VLAN Match Criteria on a Service Queue
  • Page 726 – Ordering ACL Rules; Displaying Configured Class Maps and Match Criteria
  • Page 728 – Create a QoS Policy; Creating an Input QoS Policy; Configuring Policy-Based Rate Policing
  • Page 729 – Setting a dot1p Value for Egress Packets; Creating an Output QoS Policy; Strict-Priority Queuing
  • Page 730 – Configuring Policy-Based Rate Shaping; Allocating Bandwidth to Queue
  • Page 731 – Specifying WRED Drop Precedence; Create Policy Maps; Creating Input Policy Maps
  • Page 732 – Honoring dot1p Values on Ingress Packets
  • Page 733 – Guaranteeing Bandwidth to dot1p-Based Service Queues; Applying an Input Policy Map to an Interface
  • Page 734 – Creating Output Policy Maps; Applying an Output QoS Policy to a Queue
  • Page 735 – DSCP Color Maps; Creating a DSCP Color Map
  • Page 736 – Displaying DSCP Color Maps; Displaying a DSCP Color Policy Configuration
  • Page 737 – Enabling QoS Rate Adjustment
  • Page 738 – Enabling Strict-Priority Queueing; Weighted Random Early Detection
  • Page 739 – Creating WRED Profiles
  • Page 740 – Applying a WRED Profile to Traffic; Displaying Default and Configured WRED Profiles; show qos wred-profile; Displaying WRED Drop Statistics; show qos statistics
  • Page 741 – Explicit Congestion Notification; ECN Packet Classification
  • Page 743 – Using A Configurable Weight for WRED and ECN
  • Page 745 – Global Service-Pools for WRED with ECN
  • Page 746 – Configuring a Weight for WRED and ECN Operation
  • Page 747 – Pre-Calculating Available QoS CAM Space
  • Page 748 – SNMP Support for Buffer Statistics Tracking
  • Page 751 – Enabling RIP Globally
  • Page 752 – Configure RIP on Interfaces; Controlling RIP Routing Updates; Assigning a Prefix List to RIP Routes
  • Page 753 – Adding RIP Routes from Other Instances; Setting the Send and Receive Version
  • Page 754 – receive version 2, send version 2
  • Page 755 – Generating a Default Route; Summarize Routes
  • Page 756 – debug ip rip
  • Page 757 – RIP Configuration Example; RIP Configuration on Core2
  • Page 758 – Core 2 RIP Output; show ip
  • Page 759 – RIP Configuration on Core3; Core 3 RIP Output
  • Page 761 – RIP Configuration Summary
  • Page 763 – Fault Recovery
  • Page 764 – Setting the RMON Alarm; rmon alarm
  • Page 765 – Configuring an RMON Event; rmon event; Configuring RMON Collection Statistics
  • Page 766 – rmon collection statistics; Configuring the RMON Collection History; rmon collection history
  • Page 767 – Configuring Rapid Spanning Tree
  • Page 768 – RSTP and VLT; Configuring Interfaces for Layer 2 Mode
  • Page 769 – Enabling Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol Globally; protocol spanning-tree rstp
  • Page 773 – Modifying Interface Parameters
  • Page 774 – Influencing RSTP Root Selection
  • Page 775 – Configuring Fast Hellos for Link State Detection; Root Bridge hello time 50 ms, max age 20, forward delay 15
  • Page 777 – Role-Based Access Control; Overview of RBAC
  • Page 778 – Configuring Role-based Only AAA Authorization
  • Page 779 – System-Defined RBAC User Roles
  • Page 780 – User Roles; Creating a New User Role
  • Page 781 – secadmin
  • Page 783 – Adding and Deleting Users from a Role
  • Page 784 – AAA Authentication and Authorization for Roles; Configure AAA Authentication for Roles; Configure AAA Authorization for Roles
  • Page 786 – Configuring TACACS+ and RADIUS VSA Attributes for RBAC
  • Page 787 – Role Accounting; Configuring AAA Accounting for Roles; Applying an Accounting Method to a Role; Displaying Active Accounting Sessions for Roles; show accounting
  • Page 788 – Display Information About User Roles; Displaying User Roles; Displaying Role Permissions Assigned to a Command; Displaying Information About Users Logged into the Switch
  • Page 789 – AAA Accounting; Configuration Task List for AAA Accounting; Enabling AAA Accounting
  • Page 791 – Monitoring AAA Accounting; AAA Authentication; Configuration Task List for AAA Authentication
  • Page 792 – Configure Login Authentication for Terminal Lines
  • Page 793 – Enabling AAA Authentication; Enabling AAA Authentication — RADIUS
  • Page 794 – Server-Side Configuration; Obscuring Passwords and Keys
  • Page 795 – AAA Authorization; Privilege Levels Overview; Configuration Task List for Privilege Levels
  • Page 796 – Configuring a Username and Password
  • Page 797 – Configuring Custom Privilege Levels
  • Page 798 – username john privilege 8 password john
  • Page 799 – Specifying LINE Mode Password and Privilege; Enabling and Disabling Privilege Levels
  • Page 800 – RADIUS Authentication and Authorization; Idle Time
  • Page 801 – Configuration Task List for RADIUS
  • Page 802 – Specifying a RADIUS Server Host
  • Page 804 – Monitoring RADIUS; Configuration Task List for TACACS+; Choosing TACACS+ as the Authentication Method
  • Page 805 – tacacs-server key angeline
  • Page 806 – TACACS+ Remote Authentication and Authorization; Specifying a TACACS+ Server Host
  • Page 807 – Command Authorization
  • Page 809 – Using SCP with SSH to Copy a Software Image
  • Page 810 – Configuring the SSH Server Cipher List
  • Page 811 – Configuring the HMAC Algorithm for the SSH Server
  • Page 812 – Secure Shell Authentication
  • Page 813 – Using RSA Authentication of SSH
  • Page 814 – Configuring Host-Based SSH Authentication
  • Page 815 – Using Client-Based SSH Authentication; Troubleshooting SSH; Telnet
  • Page 816 – VTY Line and Access-Class Configuration; VTY Line Local Authentication and Authorization
  • Page 817 – VTY Line Remote Authentication and Authorization; VTY MAC-SA Filter Support
  • Page 819 – VLAN Stacking
  • Page 821 – Configure VLAN Stacking; Creating Access and Trunk Ports
  • Page 822 – Enable VLAN-Stacking for a VLAN; Configuring the Protocol Type Value for the Outer VLAN Tag
  • Page 823 – portmode hybrid; Debugging VLAN Stacking
  • Page 824 – VLAN Stacking in Multi-Vendor Networks
  • Page 827 – VLAN Stacking Packet Drop Precedence; Enabling Drop Eligibility
  • Page 828 – Honoring the Incoming DEI Value
  • Page 829 – Marking Egress Packets with a DEI Value; Dynamic Mode CoS for VLAN Stacking
  • Page 831 – Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling
  • Page 834 – Specifying a Destination MAC Address for BPDUs; Setting Rate-Limit BPDUs
  • Page 835 – Debugging Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling; Provider Backbone Bridging
  • Page 837 – Enabling and Disabling sFlow
  • Page 838 – show sflow
  • Page 839 – sFlow Show Commands; Displaying Show sFlow Global; sFlow services are enabled; Displaying Show sFlow on an Interface
  • Page 840 – Displaying Show sFlow on a Line Card; Configuring Specify Collectors; Changing the Polling Intervals
  • Page 841 – sFlow on LAG ports
  • Page 842 – Global extended information enabled: none
  • Page 844 – Simple Network Management Protocol
  • Page 845 – Set up SNMP
  • Page 847 – Reading Managed Object Values
  • Page 848 – Writing Managed Object Values; Configuring Contact and Location Information using
  • Page 849 – Subscribing to Managed Object Value Updates using
  • Page 850 – Enabling a Subset of SNMP Traps; envmon
  • Page 852 – entity; Copy Configuration Files Using SNMP
  • Page 854 – Copying a Configuration File
  • Page 855 – Copying Configuration Files via SNMP; Copying the Startup-Config Files to the Running-Config
  • Page 856 – Copying the Startup-Config Files to the Server via FTP; Copying the Startup-Config Files to the Server via TFTP
  • Page 857 – Copy a Binary File to the Startup-Configuration; Additional MIB Objects to View Copy Statistics
  • Page 858 – Obtaining a Value for MIB Objects
  • Page 859 – Viewing the Available Flash Memory Size; MIB Support to Display the Software Core Files Generated
  • Page 860 – Viewing the Software Core Files Generated by the System; Manage VLANs using SNMP; Creating a VLAN
  • Page 861 – Assigning a VLAN Alias; Displaying the Ports in a VLAN; Add Tagged and Untagged Ports to a VLAN
  • Page 862 – Managing Overload on Startup
  • Page 863 – Enabling and Disabling a Port using SNMP; Fetch Dynamic MAC Entries using SNMP
  • Page 865 – Deriving Interface Indices
  • Page 866 – Monitor Port-Channels; member for Po1; active, 2 – status inactive
  • Page 867 – Status active, 2 – status; Troubleshooting SNMP Operation
  • Page 868 – Configure Storm Control; Configuring Storm Control from INTERFACE Mode
  • Page 869 – Configure Spanning Tree
  • Page 871 – Enabling Spanning Tree Protocol Globally
  • Page 873 – Adding an Interface to the Spanning Tree Group
  • Page 875 – Modifying Interface STP Parameters; Enabling PortFast
  • Page 876 – spanning-tree 0 portfast; Preventing Network Disruptions with BPDU Guard
  • Page 878 – EDS; Selecting STP Root
  • Page 879 – STP Root Guard; Root Guard Scenario
  • Page 880 – Configuring Root Guard
  • Page 881 – Enabling SNMP Traps for Root Elections and Topology
  • Page 882 – Configuring Loop Guard
  • Page 883 – Displaying STP Guard Configuration
  • Page 885 – Network Time Protocol
  • Page 887 – Configure the Network Time Protocol; Configuring NTP Broadcasts
  • Page 888 – Disabling NTP on an Interface; Configuring NTP Authentication
  • Page 892 – Time and Date; Setting the Time and Date for the Switch Software Clock; clock set; Setting the Timezone
  • Page 893 – Set Daylight Saving Time
  • Page 894 – Setting Recurring Daylight Saving Time
  • Page 896 – Configuring a Tunnel
  • Page 897 – Configuring Tunnel Keepalive Settings
  • Page 898 – Configuring a Tunnel Interface; ip unnumbered tengigabitethernet 0/; Configuring Tunnel allow-remote Decapsulation
  • Page 899 – Configuring Tunnel source anylocal Decapsulation; tunnel source anylocal; Multipoint Receive-Only Tunnels; Guidelines for Configuring Multipoint Receive-Only Tunnels
  • Page 901 – Upgrade Overview
  • Page 903 – Feature Description
  • Page 904 – How Uplink Failure Detection Works
  • Page 905 – UFD and NIC Teaming
  • Page 906 – Configuring Uplink Failure Detection
  • Page 908 – Clearing a UFD-Disabled Interface; group; Downstream interface set to UFD
  • Page 909 – Displaying Uplink Failure Detection
  • Page 910 – show interfaces tengigabitethernet 0/45
  • Page 911 – show configuration; Sample Configuration: Uplink Failure Detection
  • Page 913 – Default VLAN
  • Page 914 – VLANs and Port Tagging
  • Page 915 – Creating a Port-Based VLAN
  • Page 916 – Assigning Interfaces to a VLAN
  • Page 917 – show vlan; Moving Untagged Interfaces
  • Page 918 – Assigning an IP Address to a VLAN
  • Page 919 – Configuring Native VLANs
  • Page 920 – Enabling Null VLAN as the Default VLAN
  • Page 921 – VRF Overview
  • Page 922 – VRF Configuration Notes
  • Page 925 – VRF Configuration; Load VRF CAM; Creating a Non-Default VRF Instance; Assigning an Interface to a VRF
  • Page 926 – Assigning a Front-end Port to a Management VRF; View VRF Instance Information
  • Page 927 – Assigning an OSPF Process to a VRF Instance; Configuring VRRP on a VRF Instance
  • Page 929 – Sample VRF Configuration
  • Page 936 – Configuring Route Leaking without Filtering Criteria
  • Page 939 – Configuring Route Leaking with Filtering
  • Page 943 – VLT on Core Switches; Enhanced VLT
  • Page 944 – VLT Terminology
  • Page 945 – Configure Virtual Link Trunking
  • Page 949 – Primary and Secondary VLT Peers
  • Page 950 – VLT Bandwidth Monitoring; VLT and IGMP Snooping; VLT IPv6
  • Page 951 – VLT Port Delayed Restoration; PIM-Sparse Mode Support on VLT
  • Page 953 – VLT Routing; Spanned VLANs
  • Page 954 – Configuring VLT Unicast; VLT Multicast Routing
  • Page 955 – Configuring VLT Multicast
  • Page 956 – RSTP Configuration; Preventing Forwarding Loops in a VLT Domain; Sample RSTP Configuration
  • Page 957 – Configuring VLT; Configuring a VLT Interconnect
  • Page 958 – Enabling VLT and Creating a VLT Domain
  • Page 959 – Configuring a VLT Backup Link; Configuring a VLT Port Delay Period
  • Page 960 – Reconfiguring the Default VLT Settings (Optional)
  • Page 964 – VLT Sample Configuration
  • Page 968 – Sample PVST+ Configuration
  • Page 969 – eVLT Configuration Example
  • Page 970 – eVLT Configuration Step Examples
  • Page 972 – PIM-Sparse Mode Configuration Example
  • Page 973 – Verifying a VLT Configuration
  • Page 974 – show vlt; show spanning-tree rstp
  • Page 976 – Sts; Additional VLT Sample Configurations
  • Page 977 – Configuring Virtual Link Trunking (VLT Peer 1); interface port-channel 110; Configuring Virtual Link Trunking (VLT Peer 2)
  • Page 979 – Troubleshooting VLT
  • Page 980 – Reconfiguring Stacked Switches as VLT
  • Page 981 – Specifying VLT Nodes in a PVLAN
  • Page 983 – PVLAN Operations When a VLT Peer is Restarted; Interoperation of VLT Nodes in a PVLAN with ARP Requests; in PVLAN
  • Page 985 – Configuring a VLT VLAN or LAG in a PVLAN; Creating a VLT LAG or a VLT VLAN
  • Page 986 – Associating the VLT LAG or VLT VLAN in a PVLAN
  • Page 987 – Proxy ARP Capability on VLT Peer Nodes
  • Page 988 – Working of Proxy ARP for VLT Peer Nodes
  • Page 989 – VLT Nodes as Rendezvous Points for Multicast Resiliency; Configuring VLAN-Stack over VLT
  • Page 991 – vlan-stack compatible
  • Page 994 – Proxy Gateway in VLT Domains
  • Page 996 – LLDP organizational TLV for proxy gateway
  • Page 997 – Sample Configuration Scenario for VLT Proxy Gateway
  • Page 999 – Configuring an LLDP VLT Proxy Gateway
  • Page 1000 – Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol; VRRP Overview
  • Page 1001 – VRRP Benefits
  • Page 1002 – VRRP Configuration; Creating a Virtual Router
  • Page 1003 – no shutdown; Configuring the VRRP Version for an IPv4 Group
  • Page 1004 – Assign Virtual IP addresses
  • Page 1005 – Configuring a Virtual IP Address
  • Page 1006 – Setting VRRP Group (Virtual Router) Priority
  • Page 1007 – Configuring VRRP Authentication; simple 7 dell; Disabling Preempt
  • Page 1008 – no preempt; Changing the Advertisement Interval
  • Page 1009 – advertise-interval 10; Track an Interface or Object
  • Page 1010 – Tracking an Interface
  • Page 1011 – track TenGigabitEthernet 1/2; VRRP TenGigabitEthernet 2/30 IPv6 VRID 1
  • Page 1012 – Setting VRRP Initialization Delay
  • Page 1013 – VRRP for an IPv4 Configuration
  • Page 1017 – Master; Backup
  • Page 1018 – VRRP in a VRF Configuration
  • Page 1020 – VLAN Scenario
  • Page 1022 – Displaying VRRP in a VRF Configuration; ip vrf forwarding red
  • Page 1024 – IEEE Compliance
  • Page 1025 – RFC and I-D Compliance; General Internet Protocols
  • Page 1027 – General IPv4 Protocols
  • Page 1028 – General IPv6 Protocols
  • Page 1031 – Network Management
  • Page 1037 – Multicast
  • Page 1039 – MIB Location
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Dell Networking Configuration Guide for the
Z9500 Switch
9.7(0.0)

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Summary

Page 3 - Contents

Contents 1 About this Guide................................................................................................. 33 Audience .............................................................................................................................................. 33 Conventions ........

Page 33 - Audience; Keyword; Related Documents

1 About this Guide This guide describes the protocols and features that the Dell Networking Operating Software (OS) supports on the Z9500 system and provides configuration instructions and examples for implementing them.Though this guide contains information on protocols, it is not intended to be a ...

Page 34 - Accessing the Command Line

2 Configuration Fundamentals The Dell Networking OS command line interface (CLI) is a text-based interface you can use to configure interfaces and protocols.The CLI is structured in modes for security and management purposes. Different sets of commands are available in each mode, and you can limit u...

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