control mp
mp
Note: The examples that follow assume that the MP interface on this device is net
number 6.
bacp The list bacp command lists the statistics for bandwidth allocation control
packets which have been sent or received on this MP circuit.
Example:
PPP 6> list bacp
BACP Statistic In Out
------------- -- ---
Packets: 6 8
Octets: 60 80
Rejects: 0 -
bap The list bap command lists the statistics for bandwidth allocation protocol
packets which have been sent or received on this MP circuit.
Example:
PPP 6> list bap
BAP Statistic In Out
------------- -- ---
Packets: 3 3
Octets: 22 37
Call Requests: 1 0
Call Response(ACK): 0 1
Call Resp(NK & FLLNK): 0 0
Call Response(Rej): 0 0
Callback Requests: 0 0
Callback Response(ACK): 0 0
Cllbck Resp(NK & FLLNK): 0 0
Callback Response(Rej): 0 0
Drop Requests: 0 1
Drop Response(ACK): 1 0
Drop Resp(NK & FLLNK): 0 0
Drop Response(Rej): 0 0
Call Status(Success): 1 0
Call Status(Fail): 0 0
There are four different responses to a peer’s request: ACK, NAK,
FULL-NAK, and REJECT.
ACK Indicates the peer’s request has been granted.
NAK (NK)
Indicates that the peer’s request is supported but not desired at this
time. Try again later.
FULL-NAK (FLLNK)
Indicates that the peer s request is supported but because of a
resource condition, cannot be granted at this time. The request
should not be sent again until the total bandwidth across the MP
bundle changes.
REJECT (REJ)
Indicates that the request is not supported.
control bacp
The list control bacp command lists the current state of the BACP
state-machine within PPP.The state information is identical to that produced
for all of the PPP control protocols. Information about favored peer is also
listed. Favored peer is used to alleviate BAP packet collisions (when both
sides simultaneously initiate requests). During BACP negotiations, each
side sends a magic-number and the one with the smallest magic number is
the favored peer and should take precedence in the event of a collision.
Monitoring MP
520 MRS V3.2 Software User’s Guide