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Recipe 15.12 Viewing DLSw Status Information

15.12.1 Problem

You want to check on DLSw status on your router.

15.12.2 Solution

This command shows the status of a DLSw peer relationship:

Router>show dlsw peers
Peers:                state     pkts_rx   pkts_tx  type  drops ckts TCP   uptime
 TCP 10.1.1.5        CONNECT        350       350  conf      0    0   0 02:55:03
 TCP 10.1.1.9        CONNECT        124       124  conf      0    0   0 01:17:28
 Total number of connected peers: 2
 Total number of connections:     2

This command looks at the status of the SNA circuits carried within these peer connections:

Router>show dlsw circuits
Index           local addr(lsap)    remote addr(dsap)  state          uptime
1459617889      4000.5555.a820(04)  4000.3745.aaaa(04) CONNECTED         3d05h
2097152104      4000.5555.ac21(04)  4000.3745.aaaa(04) CONNECTED         2d18h
738197600       000c.2950.aa40(14)  4000.3745.aaaa(04) CONNECTED         3d06h
2214592610      4000.aaaa.3826(04)  4000.3745.aaaa(04) CONNECTED         3d05h
2785017948      4001.bbbb.6797(04)  4000.3745.aaaa(04) CONNECTED         3d06h
Total number of circuits connected: 5

15.12.3 Discussion

It is important to remember the difference between a peer and a circuit. A peer relationship exists between two DLSw routers. You can bring up a peer relationship between two routers and have no application information flowing between them. A circuit, on the other hand, is an SNA connection between a device connected to one of these routers and a device connected to the other.

The show dlsw peers command shows only information about the peer relationship. It indicates the state of each peer connection, how many packets have been sent and received along each path, how many circuits are active, and how long the peers have been up. The example shows two peer routers, as is the case in Recipe 15.11. In this example, both peers are in a connected state, and neither has any active circuits passing through it (as shown in the ckts column).

The show dlsw circuits command looks at the status of the circuits. In this case, there are five active circuits. The output shows how long each of the circuits has been connected, and the MAC addresses involved. It also shows the SSAP and DSAP associated with each session, which can help you determine what circuits apply to what applications.

The index number associated with each circuit is just an identifying number that you can use to manually disconnect a particular circuit. You can clear all of the circuits at once as follows:

Router#clear dlsw circuits

Or, to clear only the second circuit listed in the example output, use the following:

Router#clear dlsw circuits 2097152104

15.12.4 See Also

Recipe 15.11


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