Cisco ASR 14000 Series Management Command Reference page 314

Router system
Hide thumbs Also See for ASR 14000 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

show redundancy
C i s c o C o n f i d e n t i a l - B e t a R e v i e w R 3 . 7. 1
Standby node in 0/RP1/CPU0 is NSR-ready
Reload and boot info
----------------------
RP reloaded Mon Jul 30 19:27:42 2007: 2 weeks, 1 day, 13 hours, 40 minutes ago
Active node booted Mon Jul 30 19:27:42 2007: 2 weeks, 1 day, 13 hours, 40 minute
s ago
Standby node boot Mon Jul 30 19:28:13 2007: 2 weeks, 1 day, 13 hours, 39 minutes
ago
Standby node last went not ready Mon Jul 30 20:27:00 2007: 2 weeks, 1 day, 12 ho
urs, 41 minutes ago
Standby node last went ready Mon Jul 30 20:27:00 2007: 2 weeks, 1 day, 12 hours,
41 minutes ago
There have been 0 switch-overs since reload
Table 41
Table 41
Field
Node */*/* is in XXX role
Partner node (*/*/*) is in XXX
role
Standby node in (*/*/*) is ready Current state of the standby node, where (*/*/*) is the standby route
Standby node in (*/*/*) is
NSR-ready
Reload and boot info
The following sample output shows the status of the redundant RPs in the system:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router# show redundancy summary
The status of the standby node is indicated in parentheses next to the node identifier. The nonstop routing
(NSR) status is indicated following NSR:. Possible values are Ready and Not ready.
Cisco ASR 14000 Series Router System Management Command Reference
SMR-312
describes the significant fields shown in the display.
show redundancy Field Descriptions
Active Node
Standby Node
-----------
------------
0/4/CPU0
0/4/CPU1
0/RP0/CPU0
0/RP1/CPU0 (Ready, NSR: Ready)
Hardware Redundancy and Node Administration Commands on Cisco IOS XR Software
Description
Current role of the primary route processor, where (*/*/*) is the
route processor ID in the format rack/slot/module, and XXX is the
role of the route processor (active or standby).
In the example, this field shows that the node with the ID
0/RP0/CPU0 is in active role.
Current role of the secondary (or partner) route processor, where
(*/*/*) is the route processor ID in the rack/slot/module format, and
XXX is the role of the route processor (active or standby).
In the example, this field shows that the node with the ID
0/RP1/CPU0 is in standby role.
processor ID.
In the example, the standby node is ready.
Current state of the standby node regarding nonstop routing (NSR),
where (*/*/*) is the standby route processor ID.
In the example, the standby node is NSR-ready.
General overview of the active and standby route processors' reload
and boot history.
N/A
N/A
OL-17231-01

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents