IBM 12.1(22)EA6 Switch User Manual


 
7-14
Cisco Systems Intelligent Gigabit Ethernet Switch Modules for the IBM BladeCenter, Software Configuration Guide
24R9746
Chapter 7 Configuring Interface Characteristics
Monitoring and Maintaining the Interfaces
This example shows how to display the status of switching ports:
Switch# show interfaces gigabitethernet 0/1 switchport
Name: Gi0/1
Switchport: Enabled
Administrative Mode: trunk
Operational Mode: trunk
Administrative Trunking Encapsulation: dot1q
Operational Trunking Encapsulation: dot1q
Negotiation of Trunking: On
Access Mode VLAN: 2 (VLAN0002)
Trunking Native Mode VLAN: 2 (VLAN0002)
Voice VLAN: none
Administrative private-vlan host-association: none
Administrative private-vlan mapping: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk native VLAN: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk encapsulation: dot1q
Administrative private-vlan trunk normal VLANs: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk private VLANs: none
Operational private-vlan: none
Trunking VLANs Enabled: 2-4094
Pruning VLANs Enabled: 2-1001
Capture Mode Disabled
Capture VLANs Allowed: ALL
Protected: false
Appliance trust: none
Switch#
This example shows how to display the running configuration of Gigabit Ethernet interface 17:
Switch# show running-config interface gigabitethernet0/17
Building configuration...
Current configuration : 156 bytes
!
interface GigabitEthernet0/17
description extern1
switchport access vlan 2
switchport trunk native vlan 2
ip access-group SecWiz_Gi0_1_out_ip in
end
For additional examples of the show interfaces privileged EXEC command output, see the command
reference for this release.
show ip interface [interface-id] Display the usability status of all interfaces configured for IP or the
specified interface.
show interfaces transceiver properties (Optional) Display speed and duplex settings on the interface.
show running-config interface [interface-id] Display the running configuration in RAM for the interface.
show version Display the hardware configuration, software version, the names and
sources of configuration files, and the boot images.
Table 7-2 show Commands for Interfaces (continued)
Command Purpose