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Icnd2 Command Reference Guide

The document describes commands for configuring VLANs, spanning trees, VTP, EtherChannels, OSPF, EIGRP, and their show and debug commands. It includes commands for creating and modifying VLANs, setting STP parameters, configuring VTP domains and modes, creating EtherChannels, enabling OSPF and EIGRP on interfaces, and commands for viewing protocol status and troubleshooting.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
49 views7 pages

Icnd2 Command Reference Guide

The document describes commands for configuring VLANs, spanning trees, VTP, EtherChannels, OSPF, EIGRP, and their show and debug commands. It includes commands for creating and modifying VLANs, setting STP parameters, configuring VTP domains and modes, creating EtherChannels, enabling OSPF and EIGRP on interfaces, and commands for viewing protocol status and troubleshooting.

Uploaded by

Emily
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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VLAN Commands

 vlan 5 (global command to create Vlan 5 and put the user into Vlan configuration mode)
 name Test_Vlan (Vlan mode command to name a Vlan)
 shutdown vlan 5 (global command that has the same effect as the “shutdown” Vlan mode command in Vlan 5)
 switchport mode access (interface mode command that hard sets the interface into access mode)
 switchport mode trunk (interface mode command that hard sets the interface into trunk mode)
 switchport mode dynamic desirable (interface mode command that causes the interface to prefer trunking)
 switchport mode dynamic auto (interface mode command that causes the interface to accept negotiation)
 switchport access vlan 5 (interface mode command that sets the interface to being in access Vlan 5)
 switchport trunk encapsulation dot1q (interface mode command that sets the trunk encapsulation to dot1q)
 switchport trunk encapsulation isl (interface mode command that sets the trunk encapsulation to ISL)
 switchport trunk encapsulation auto (interface mode command to enable trunk attempted autonegotiation)
 switchport trunk native vlan 5 (interface mode command to specify the untagged Vlan on a trunk link as 5)
 switchport nonegotiate (interface mode command that disables Vlan trunk negotiation)
 switchport voice vlan 6 (defines Vlan 6 as being Vlan tagged on an access port to enable phone traffic)
 switchport trunk allowed vlan add 5 (interface mode command that adds Vlan 5 to an existing trunk)
 switchport trunk allowed vlan all (interface mode command that allows all Vlans on a trunk)
 switchport trunk allowed vlan except 5 (interface mode command that allows all Vlans except 5 on a trunk)
 switchport trunk allowed vlan remove 5 (interface mode command that removes Vlan 5 from a trunk)
 switchport trunk allowed vlan 1-3,5 (interface mode command that allows Vlans 1-3 and 5 on a trunk)
 show interfaces Gi1/0/1 switchport (lists administrative switchport information about the Gi1/0/1 interface)
 show interfaces Gi1/0/1 trunk (lists trunk-related information about the Gi1/0/1 interface)
 show vlan brief (lists a shorter, more summarized list of Vlan-related information for the device)
 show vlan summary (lists a summarization of Vlan configuration details for the device)
 show vlan id 5 (lists more detailed information specific to Vlan 5)
 show vlan 5 “ “
 show vlan name Test_Vlan (lists more detailed information about the Vlan named “Test_Vlan”)

Spanning Tree Commands


 spanning-tree mode pvst (global command to change the STP mode to Cisco’s PVST+ implementation)
 spanning-tree mode rapid-pvst (global command to change the STP mode to Rapid STP+)
 spanning-tree mode mst (global command to change the STP mode to MST)
 spanning-tree vlan 5 root primary (global command to change the switch to root for Vlan 5, if possible)
 spanning-tree vlan 5 root secondary (similar to the above command, but used to set secondary bridge)
 spanning-tree vlan 5 priority 4096 (global command to set the Vlan priority on Vlan 5 to ‘4096’)
 spanning-tree vlan cost 20 (interface command that sets the STP cost value for the interface to 20)
 spanning-tree vlan 5 port-priority 32 (interface command that sets the STP priority of the interface to 32)
 spanning-tree portfast (interface command that enables Cisco PortFast on an interface)
 spanning-tree bpduguard enable (interface command that causes a port to err-disable upon receiving a BPDU)
 spanning-tree portfast default (global command to enable PortFast by default on all access ports)
 spanning-tree bpduguard default (global command to enable BPDU Guard by default on all access ports)
 spanning-tree bpdufilter enable (interface command to filter BPDUs if received on the interface)
 show spanning-tree (lists information about STP status on the switch)
 show spanning-tree interface Gi1/0/1 (lists STP information for the Gi1/0/1 port)
 show spanning-tree vlan 5 (lists information about STP for Vlan 5)
 show spanning-tree vlan 5 root (lists information about the STP root for Vlan 5)
 show spanning-tree summary (shows a summarized listing of STP information)
 debug spanning-tree events (debugs changes in the STP topology and calculations as they occur)
 show spanning-tree interface Gi1/0/1 portfast (lists line-item-style information about PortFast on Gi1/0/1)

VTP Commands
 vtp domain tgfn (global command that specifies the VTP domain name as ‘tgfn’)
 vtp password Nebraska01 (global command the specifies the VTP password as ‘Nebraska01’)
 vtp mode server (global command that sets the VTP status as server)
 vtp mode client (global command that sets the VTP status as client)
 vtp mode transparent (global command that changes VTP mode to transparent)
 vtp version 2 (global command to change the default VTP version from 1 to 2)
 vtp pruning (global command to tell the VTP server to use VTP pruning on all switch links)
 shutdown vlan 5 (global command that administratively disables Vlan 5)
 show vtp status (displays the status of the current VTP domain)
 show vtp password (displays the VTP password that’s currently set)

Etherchannel Commands
 channel-group 1 mode on (interface command that creates EtherChannel 1 and forcibly puts the port into it)
 channel-group 1 mode auto (interface command that creates EtherChannel 1 and enables active PAgP)
 channel-group 1 mode desirable (interface command that creates EtherChannel 1 and enables passive PAgP)
 channel-group 1 mode active (interface command that creates EtherChannel 1 and enables active LAcP)
 channel-group 1 mode passive (interface command that creates EtherChannel 1 and enables passive LAcP)
 show etherchannel summary (shows information regarding EtherChannel config and channels)

OSPF for IPv4 Commands


 router ospf 1 (enters OSPF configuration mode with the process ID of ‘1’)
 network 10.100.0.0 0.0.255.255 area 0 (OSPF command that enables OSPF on all interfaces on this network)
 ip ospf 1 area 0 (interface command to enable OSPF and assign the interface to area 0)
 ip ospf cost 10 (interface command to manually set the OSPF interface cost to ‘10’)
 bandwidth 64000 (interface command that specifies the interface bandwidth)
 auto-cost reference-bandwidth 1000000 (router command that specifies the OSPF reference bandwidth)
 router-id 1.1.1.1 (OSPF command that manually configures the router ID to ‘1.1.1.1’)
 interface loopback 1 (global command to create Loopback interface 1, and enter its configuration mode)
 maximum-paths 6 (router command to set the number of equal-cost routes to add to the routing table to ‘6’)
 passive interface Gi1/0/1 (router command to make the Gi1/0/1 a passive interface in terms of routing)
 passive-interface default (OSPF command that changes the OSPF default for interfaces to be passive)
 default-information originate (OSPF command to tell OSPF to advertise the default route)
 default-information originate always (OSPF command to tell OSPF to always advertise the default route)
 show ip ospf (list information about OSPF on the router, including process ID, areas, and interfaces)
 show ip ospf interface brief (lists the interfaces on which the OSPF protocol is enabled, including passives)
 show ip ospf interface Gi1/0/1 (lists all information related to OSPF on the Gi1/0/1 interface)
 show ip protocols (shows routing protocol parameters and current timing values)
 show ip ospf neighbor 1.1.1.1 (shows OSPF information for the neighbor with router ID ‘1.1.1.1’)
 show ip ospf neighbor (shows OSPF neighbor information, including status and timeout values)
 show ip ospf database (shows OSPF database for the LSAs exchanged and statuses)
 show ip route ospf (lists all the routes in the routing table that were acquired through OSPF)
 clear ip ospf process (resets the OSPF process, resets all neighbor relationships, and recalculates RID)
 ip ospf hello-interval 10 (interface command that manually sets the OSPF hello interval to 10 seconds)
 ip ospf dead-interval 40 (interface command that manually sets the OSPF dead timeout to 40 seconds)
 debug ip ospf events (debugs all messages exchange by OSPF, this can be a lot of information)
 debug ip ospf adj (debugs all OSPF adjacency events, including neighbor exchanges)
 debug ip ospf packet (debugs all OSPF packet messages, this can be a lot of information)
 debug ip ospf hello (debugs all OSPF messages pertaining to neighbor hellos and dead receipts)

EIGRP for IPv4 Commands


 router eigrp 1 (global command to start EIGRP configuration using ASN ‘1’)
 network 10.100.0.0 0.0.255.255 (EIGRP command to enable EIGRP all interfaces within the subnet specified)
 maximum-paths 6 (router command to change the number of equal-cost routes to use to ‘6’)
 variance 3 (router command that changes the EIGRP route variance multiplier to ‘3’)
 bandwidth 64000 (interface command to manually set the bandwidth to 64000 Kbps)
 delay 20000 (interface command to manually set the delay variable to 20,000 microseconds)
 ip hello-interval eigrp 1 10 (interface command to set the EIGRP hello interval for ASN ‘1’ to 10 seconds)
 ip hold-time eigrp 1 40 (interface command to set the EIGRP hold time for neighbors on ASN ‘1’ to 40 seconds)
 no auto-summary (router command that disables automatic summarization of routes)
 passive-interface Gi1/0/1 (router command to make the Gi1/0/1 passive from a routing perspective)
 passive-interface default (router command that changes the default behavior for routing interfaces to passive)
 show ip eigrp interfaces (shows a line-item-style list of all non-passive EIGRP interfaces)
 show ip eigrp interfaces Gi1/0/1 (shows a brief listing of EIGRP-related interface information for Gi1/0/1)
 show ip eigrp interfaces detail Gi1/0/1 (shows a more complex listing of EIGRP information for Gi1/0/1)
 show ip protocols (shows routing protocol parameters and current timing values)
 show ip eigrp neighbors (lists EIGRP neighbors and current status)
 show ip eigrp neighbors Gi1/0/1 (lists EIGRP neighbors and status for all neighbors off of Gi1/0/1)
 show ip eigrp topology (lists the EIGRP topology table, including all neighbors and all successors)
 show ip eigrp topology 10.0.0.0/24 (lists all EIGRP topology information for everything in the specified subnet)
 show ip route eigrp (shows all routes in the routing table that were learned through EIGRP)
 debug eigrp fsm (debugs all information related to feasible successors and route election)
 debug eigrp packets (debugs all information on EIGRP packet exchanges, this can be a lot of information)

eBGP for IPv4 Commands


 router bgp 1 (opens the configuration for BGP ASN ‘1’)
 neighbor 192.168.100.1 remote-as 65003 (attempts to start a peering with 192.168.100.1 in ASN ‘65003’)
 neighbor 192.168.100.1 shutdown (turns off peering with the BGP peer ‘1921.68.100.1’)
 network 192.168.100.0 mask 255.255.255.0 (BGP command to add the 192.168.100.0/24 network to routing)
 ip route 192.168.0.0 255.255.255.0 null0 (defines the discard, or blackhole route)
 show ip bgp (displays the current BGP peering and topology table)
 show ip bgp summary (displays basic BGP configuration for the local router)
 show tcp summary (lists line-item-style information for all TCP sessions the router has)

Serial & Encapsulation Commands


 encapsulation ppp (interface command that changes the default encapsulation from HDLC to PPP)
 encapsulation hdlc (interface command that changes back to the default encapsulation of HDLC)
 clock rate 64000 (serial interface command that sets the clocking rate on a DCE interface)
 bandwidth 256000 (interface command that sets the router’s perception of link’s speed in Kpbs)
 ppp authentication pap (interface command that specifies to use PAP authentication only)
 ppp authentication chap (interface command that specifies to use CHAP authentication only)
 username Caleb password IsAwesome! (global command that creates the ‘Caleb’ user and sets his password)
 ppp pap sent-username Caleb password IsAwesome! (interface command that specifies the PAP credentials)
 interface multilink 1 (creates the PPP multilink numbered ‘1’, and moves to its configuration mode)
 ppp multilink (interface command that enables MLPPP features)
 ppp multilink group 1 (interface command that associates the interface with MLPPP group ‘1’)
 show controllers Serial 0/1/0 (shows the serial hardware layer information for the Serial 0/1/0 interface)
 show ppp multilink (lists detailed status information about each PPP Multilink virtual interface)
 show ppp all (lists line-item-style status information about each active PPP link on the router)
 debug ppp authentication (debugs PPP authentication successes, failures, and packet transmissions)
 debug ppp negotiation (debugs PPP LCP and NCP negotiation for Layer 2/3 communications)

GRE Tunneling Commands


 interface tunnel 1 (global command to create Tunnel interface 1, and enters the configuration for it)
 tunnel source Gi1/0/1 (tunnel interface command that names the source interface for the tunnel)
 tunnel source 192.168.100.1 (tunnel interface command that names the source IP address for the tunnel)
 tunnel destination 198.254.0.1 (tunnel interface command for the destination IP address for the tunnel)
 tunnel mode gre ip (tunnel interface command that specifies the mode, which must match on both ends)
 permit gre 192.168.100.0 0.0.0.255 192.168.200.0 0.0.0.255
o (extended ACL command that allows GRE from 192.168.100.0/24 to 192.168.200.0/24)

PPP/PPPoE Commands
 interface dialer 1 (global command that creates PPP or PPPoE Dialer interface 1)
 ip address negotiated (interface command that allows the user of PPP IPCP to discover an IP address)
 mtu 1420 (interface command to define the MTU size for outbound packets)
 encapsulation ppp (interface command that sets the encapsulation to PPP)
 ppp chap hostname router.local (interface command that tells an interface to use a different hostname)
 ppp chap password IsAwesome! (interface command that specifies the CHAP handshake password)
 dialer pool 4 (interface command that references the dialer pool to use)
 pppoe-client dial-pool-number (interface command to add the interface to a dialer interface pool)
 pppoe enable (interface command to enable the PPPoE feature)
 mac-address 0008.4526.9127 (interface command to specify a different MAC address for Layer 2 use)
 show interfaces tunnel 1 (displays the status of tunnel interface ‘1’)
 show interfaces dialer 1 (displays the status of dialer interface ‘1’)
 show interfaces virtual-access 1 (displays the status of virtual access interface ‘1’)
 show interfaces virtual-access 1 configuration (displays the IOS configuration or virtual access interface ‘1’)
 show pppoe session interface Serial 0/1/0 (displays a brief status of PPPoE on the Serial 0/1/0 interface)
 show pppoe session (displays the status of any active PPPoE sessions)

Standard IPv4 ACL Commands


 access-list 10 deny 192.168.0.0 0.0.255.255 log (denies all traffic from 192.168.0.0/16 and logs it)
 access-list 10 permit 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.255 (allows all traffic from 192.168.1.0/24)
 access-list 10 remark This is a test access list. (adds a text comment to access list ‘10’)
 ip access-group 10 in (interface command to bind access list ‘10’ to the interface inbound)
 ip access-group 10 out (interface command to bind access list ‘10’ to the interface outbound)
 show ip interface Gi1/0/1 (this command actually lists all the ACLs that are bound to the Gi1/0/1 interface)
 show access-lists 10 (shows details of access list ‘10’)
 show access-lists SNMP_FILTER (shows details of the access list named ‘SNMP_FILTER’)
 show ip access-lists 10 (shows Layer 3 information for access list ‘10’)
Extended IPv4 ACL Commands
 access-list 100 permit tcp 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.255 10.0.0.0 0.0.0.255 log
o (allows TCP traffic from 192.168.1.0/24 to 10.0.0.0/24 and logs it)
 access-list 150 deny tcp 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.255 http 10.0.0.0 0.0.0.255 http
o (denies TCP traffic on port 80 from 192.168.1.0/24 to 10.0.0.0/24 on port 80)
 access-list 150 remark This is a test advanced access list. (adds a text remark to access list ‘150’)
 ip access-group 150 in (interface command to bind access list ‘150’ to the interface inbound)
 ip access-group 150 out (interface command to bind access list ‘150’ to the interface outbound)
 access-class 150 in (vty line command to bind access list ‘150’ to the incoming traffic)
 access-class 150 out (vty line command to bind access list ‘150’ to the outgoing traffic)
 ip access-list extended SNMP_BLOCK (global command to create an extended ACL called ‘SNMP_BLOCK’)
 deny 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.255 log (ACL command to block traffic from 192.168.1.0/24 and log it)
 permit tcp 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.255 10.0.0.0 0.0.0.255 http
o (ACL command to allow HTTP traffic from 192.168.1.0/24 to 10.0.0.0/24)
 remark This is a sample comment. (ACL command to create a text remark)
 show access-lists 10 (shows details of access list ‘10’)
 show access-lists SNMP_FILTER (shows details of the access list named ‘SNMP_FILTER’)
 show ip access-lists 10 (shows Layer 3 information for access list ‘10’)

Router on a Stick (RoaS) & Layer 3 Switch Commands


 interface Gi1/0/1.10 (creates a ‘.10’ subinterface on the Gi1/0/1 interface)
 encapsulation dot1q 10 (subinterface command to specify VLAN tagging on VLAN 10)
 encapsulation dot1q 10 native (subinterface command to specify the native VLAN as VLAN 10)
 ip routing (on newer Cisco Layer 3 switches, enables IP routing capability)
 sdm prefer lanbase-routing (on older Cisco Layer 3 switches, enables IP routing capability)
 switchport (Layer 3 switch interface command to take a port out of Layer 3 mode into Layer 2 mode)

HSRP Commands
 standby 5 ip 10.0.1.1 (interface command that enables HSRP on group number ‘5’ with shared IP ’10.0.1.1’)
 standby 5 priority 110 (interface command that specifies the HSRP group ‘5’ priority as ‘110’)
 standby 5 preempt (interface command that sets preemption for HSRP group ‘5’)
 standby 5 name Vlan_5_Failover (interface command that sets HSRP group ‘5’ with a descriptive name)
 standby version 2 (interface command that sets the HSRP version used for all groups to 2)
 show standby (lists all details about HSRP status on interfaces, including counters)
 show standby brief (lists line-item-style details about HSRP status on interfaces)

IPv6 Routing & Troubleshooting Commands


 ipv6 unicast routing (global command that enables IPv6 unicast routing)
 ipv6 address 2001:8db0:1::1/64 (interface command to configure an IPv6 address of 2001:8db0:1::1)
 ipv6 address 2001:8db0::/64 eui-64 (interface command to configure a IPv6 EUI-64 address on 2001:8db0::)
 ipv6 dhcp relay destination 2001:8db0:1::1 (interface command to specify a DHCP relay agent)
 show ipv6 interface (lists IPv6 settings for all interfaces)
 show ipv6 protocols (lists IPv6 routing and protocol information)
 ping 2001:8db0:1::1 (IPv6 PING command)
 traceroute 2001:8db0:1::1 (IPv6 traceroute command)
 show ipv6 route (shows the IPv6 routing table)
 show ipv6 neighbors (lists the IPv6 router neighbor table)
 show ipv6 routers (lists the IPv6 adjacent routers that were discovered via NDP)
OSPF for IPv6 Commands
 ipv6 router ospf 1 (starts the OSPF configuration for OSPFv6 process ID ‘1’)
 ipv6 ospf 1 area 0 (interface command that bonds the interface to OSPF ID ‘1’ in area 0)
 ipv6 ospf cost 100 (interface command that manually sets the OSPFv6 interface cost to ‘100’)
 bandwidth 100000 (interface command that sets the OSPF interface bandwidth to 100,000 Kbps)
 auto-cost reference-bandwidth 10000000 (route command that sets the OSPF reference bandwidth)
 router-id 1.1.1.1 (OSPF command that manually sets the router ID)
 maximum-paths 6 (router command that sets the number of equal cost routes to include)
 show ipv6 ospf (lists information about the router’s OSPF process)
 show ipv6 ospf interface brief (lists the interfaces OSPFv6 is running on, including passive interfaces)
 show ipv6 ospf interface Gi1/0/1 (lists the OSPFv6 information for the Gi1/0/1 interface)
 show ipv6 protocols (shows the IPv6-based routing information for the router)
 show ipv6 ospf neighbor 1.1.1.1 (shows the OSPF neighbor information for router ID ‘1.1.1.1’)
 show ipv6 ospf neighbor (lists the entire OSPF neighbor router table)
 show ipv6 ospf database (prints out the entire contents of the OSPF database)
 show ipv6 route (displays the IPv6 routing table)
 show ipv6 route ospf (shows all the routes in the IPv6 routing table that were learned via OSPF)

EIGRP for IPv6 Commands


 ipv6 router eigrp 5 (starts the EIGRP configuration for EIGRPv6 ASN ‘5’)
 ipv6 eigrp 5 (interface command that bonds the interface to EIGRP ASN ‘5’)
 maximum-paths 6 (router command to change the number of equal cost paths to include to ‘6’)
 variance 3 (router command to change the EIGRP route metric multiplier to ‘3’)
 bandwidth 100000 (interface command to set the bandwidth manually to 100,000 Kbps)
 delay 20000 (interface command to manually set the reference delay to 20,000 microseconds)
 ipv6 hello-interval eigrp 5 10 (interface subcommand that sets the EIGRP hello time for ASN ‘5’ to 10 seconds)
 ipv6 hold-time eigrp 5 40 (interface subcommand that sets the EIGRP hold time for ASN ‘5’ to 40 seconds)
 eigrp router-id 1.1.1.1 (router command that sets the EIGRPv6 router ID to ‘1.1.1.1’)
 shutdown (EIGRP router command that shuts down the EIGRPv6 process)
 passive-interface Serial0/1/0 (router command that defines a passive interface for EIGRPv6)
 passive-interface default (router command that changes the EIGRPv6 default for interfaces to passive)
 show ipv6 eigrp interfaces (lists a line-item-style set of information about EIGRPv6 interface status)
 show ipv6 eigrp interfaces Gi1/0/1 (lists EIGRPv6 status on the Gi1/0/1 interface)
 show ipv6 eigrp interfaces detail (lists detailed EIGRPv6 interface config information)
 show ipv6 protocols (shows brief information about IPv6 routing protocol and service status)
 show ipv6 eigrp neighbors (lists the EIGRPv6 neighbor table)
 show ipv6 eigrp neighbors Gi1/0/1 (lists all EIGRPv6 neighbors off the Gi1/0/1 interface)
 show ipv6 eigrp topology (lists the entire EIGRPv6 topology table)
 show ipv6 route eigrp (lists the IPv6 routing table for the routes that EIGRPv6 has added)

IPv6 ACL Commands


 ipv6 access-list SNMP_BLOCK (creates an ACL called ‘SNMP_BLOCK’, and moves to its configuration)
 permit ipv6 host 2001:8bd0:1::1 host 2001:8bd0:2::1 3389 log
o (allows IPv6 traffic from 2001:8bd0:1::1 to 2001:8bd0:2::1 on port 3389)
 deny icmp any host 2001:8bd0:3:1:1 echo-request
o (denies ICMPv6 echo requests to host 2001:8db0:3::1)
 ipv6 traffic-filter SNMP_BLOCK on (interface command to bind the ‘SNMP_BLOCK’ ACL to an interface)
 show ipv6 interface Gi1/0/1 (has an added bonus of showing what ACLs are bound to the Gi1/0/1 interface)
 show ipv6 access-list SNMP_BLOCK (displays the criteria for the ‘SNMP_BLOCK’ ACL)
 show access-lists (displays all of the ACLs on the device, both IPv4 and IPv6)

SNMP Commands
 snmp-server community SMNP_Read RO ipv6 SNMP_BLOCK
o (specifies the SNMP read-only community string as ‘SNMP_Read’, and binds the SNMP_BLOCK IPv6 ACL)
 snmp-server community SNMP_Write RW (specifies the SNMP write community string as ‘SNMP_Write’)
 snmp-server location 123 S. 11th St. (sets the text to describe the physical location as the street address)
 snmp-server contact Caleb Huggenberger (sets the text for the PoC for the equipment)
 snmp-server host 192.168.1.1 version 2c SNMP_READ (sets the SNMP trap server IP, version, and string)
 snmp-server host 192.168.1.1 informs version 2c SNMP_READ (same as above, except for inform packets)
 snmp-server enable traps (enables the SNMP server to send traps and informs to all previously declared hosts)
 show snmp community (shows a brief output of each configured community string)
 show snmp contact (shows the contents of the ‘snmp-server contact’ string)
 show snmp location (shows the contents of the ‘snmp-server location’ string)
 show snmp host (shows the ‘snmp-server host’ parameters currently configured)
 show snmp (shows a summary of the SNMP configuration present)
 show snmp user (shows a short list of all the SNMP v3 users and their parameters)
 show snmp group (shows a brief summary of the SNMP user group settings)

IP SLA Commands
 ip sla 1 (global command to define IP SLA action number ‘1’)
 icmp-echo 192.168.1.1 (IP SLA command to define an ICMP PING to 192.168.1.1)
 icmp-echo 192.168.1.1 source-ip 192.168.0.1 (same as the above, but use a source IP address of 192.168.0.1)
 frequency 60 (IP SLA command to set the execution interval to 60 seconds)
 history filter all (IP SLA command to keep all historical data for the probe)
 history buckets-kept 10 (IP SLA command to set the number of historical buckets of data to keep)
 history enhanced interval 60 buckets 5 (IP SLA command for enhanced retention, 60 seconds and 5 buckets)
 history lives-kept 1 (IP SLA command to enable keeping of historical data for the operation)
 ip sla restart 1 (global command to restart IP SLA operation number ‘1’)
 show ip sla summary (lists a line-item-style readout of the IP SLA operations configured)
 show ip sla statistics 1 (lists statistics and historical data for IP SLA operation ‘1’)
 show ip sla history 2 (lists the history buffer for IP SLA operation ‘2’)
 show ip sla enhanced-history distribution-statistics 3 (displays any enhanced history for IP SLA operation 3)

SPAN Commands
 monitor session 1 source interface Gi1/0/1 both (enables SPAN ‘1’ on Gi1/0/1 for inbound and outbound)
 monitor session 2 source vlan 3 tx (enables SPAN ‘2’ on Vlan3 for outbound)
 monitor session 3 destination interface Gi1/0/2 (enables SPAN ‘3’ to go to Gi1/0/2 for monitored traffic)
 show monitor session 1 (shows information for the config on SPAN session ‘1’)
 show monitor session all (shows information for the config on all SPAN sessions)
 show monitor detail (lists more detailed output for SPAN port configuration)

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