Layer 3 statistics Menu

 

Command: /stats/l3

 

 

 

 

[Layer 3 Statistics Menu]

 

ip

- Show IP stats

 

route

- Show route stats

 

arp

- Show ARP stats

 

icmp

- Show ICMP stats

 

tcp

- Show TCP stats

 

udp

- Show UDP stats

 

igmp

- Show IGMP stats

 

clrigmp

- Clear IGMP stats

 

ipclear

- Clear IP stats

 

dump

- Dump layer 3 stats

 

 

 

The following table describes the Layer 3 statistics menu options. Layer 3 functionality is limited in this release.

Table 43 Layer 3 statistics menu options

Command

Usage

ip

Displays IP statistics

route

Displays route statistics

arp <clear>

Displays Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) statistics. Add the

 

argument, clear, to clear ARP statistics.

icmp

Displays ICMP statistics.

tcp

Displays Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) statistics. Add the

 

argument, clear, to clear TCP statistics.

udp

Displays User Datagram Protocol (UDP) statistics. Add the

 

argument, clear, to clear UDP statistics.

igmp

Displays IGMP statistics.

clrigmp <1-4095>all

Clears all IGMP statistics for the selected VLANs.

ipclear

Clears IP statistics. Use this command with caution as it will

 

delete all the IP statistics.

dump

Displays all Layer 3 statistics.

IP statistics

Command: /stats/l3/ip

IP statistics:

 

 

 

ipInReceives:

36475

ipInHdrErrors:

0

ipInAddrErrors:

905

 

 

ipInUnknownProtos:

0

ipInDiscards:

0

ipInDelivers:

4103

ipOutRequests:

30974

ipOutDiscards:

0

 

 

ipDefaultTTL:

255

 

 

The following table describes the IP statistics:

Table 44 IP statistics

Statistics

Description

 

ipInReceives

The total number of input datagrams received from interfaces, including those

 

received in error.

 

ipInHdrErrors

The number of input datagrams discarded due to errors in their IP headers, including

 

bad checksums, version number mismatch, other format errors, time-to-live exceeded,

 

errors discovered in processing their IP options, and so on.

 

ipInAddrErrors

The number of input datagrams discarded because the IP address in their IP header

 

destination field was not a valid address to be received at this switch. This count

 

includes invalid addresses (for example, 0.0.0.0) and addresses of unsupported

 

classes (for example, Class E).

 

For entities which are not IP gateways and therefore do not forward datagrams, this

 

counter includes datagrams discarded because the destination address was not a

 

local address.

 

ipInUnknownProtos

The number of locally addressed datagrams received successfully but discarded

 

because of an unknown or unsupported protocol.

 

 

Command Line Interface 52