Tunnel Capture Object Using A Remote Ip Address - Nortel NN46110-602 Troubleshooting Manual

Nortel vpn router troubleshooting
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124 Chapter 5 Packet capture
After Telnet traffic activates the stop trigger, the
resembles the following example. The Capture state field now shows that the
capture was stopped by the stop trigger.
CES#
Capture state:
trigger
Capture buffer size:
Capture type:
Capturing on interface:
Promiscuous mode is:
Capturing MAX octets per frame:
Captured frames:
Capture buffer utilization:
Capturing direction:
Capture buffer wrapping:
Capture buffer wrapped:
Start trigger applied:
Start trigger discards:
Stop trigger applied:
CES#
To stop the capture object and save the buffer contents to a file called test4.cap,
enter the following commands:
CES#
CES#
Saving capture test-trigger to file /ide0/test4.cap please wait . .
.
220 frames written successfully
CES#

Tunnel capture object using a remote IP address

In the following example, you configure a capture object called test-remote-IP
that captures traffic arriving over a tunnel with the specified remote IP address.
To create and use this capture object, you run commands like the ones illustrated
in this example. These commands do the following:
1
2
3
NN46110-602
show capture test-trigger
capture test-trigger stop
capture test-trigger save test4.cap
Create a capture object called test-remote-ip.
Enter Capture Configuration mode for the capture object.
Set the remote IP address to 192.168.100.1.
command
show capture
STOPPED by stop
1048576
ETHERNET
FastEthernet 0/1
DISABLED
4096
188
1%
BIDIRECTIONAL
DISABLED
FALSE
permit FTP
362
permit Telnet

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