Cnfpnni-Node - Cisco MGX 8850 Command Reference Manual

Routing switch
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cnfpnni-node

Cards on Which This Command Runs
PXM45
Syntax
cnfpnni-node <node-index>
[-atmAddr atm-address]
[-level level]
[-nodeId node-id]
[-pgId pg-id]
[-lowest {true | false}]
[-enable {true | false}]
[-transitRestricted {on | off}]
[-complexNode{on | off}]
[-branchingRestricted {on | off}]
Syntax Description
node-index
-atmAddr
-level
Cisco MGX 8850 Routing Switch Command Reference
5-28
The node index specifies the relative position of a logical node within the
hierarchy of a multi-peer group. The lowest level is 1. In the current release,
the only node-index is '1'. Each new logical node added to the hierarchy
automatically gets the next higher index number, so you cannot configure the
node index.
Range: 1–10
Default: 1
Specify the ATM address for this logical node. For you to change the ATM
address, the node must be disabled. For details, see the section,
Node When
Required." Note that only the lowest node in the hierarchy
requires an ATM address.
Default:
Figure 5-6
shows the factory-set default.
This parameter specifies the level of the node within the PNNI hierarchy.
The level of the node is the number of bits in the node ID (-nodeId
parameter) or peer group ID (-pg-id parameter). For example, the default
level of 56 means that the node ID is 56 bits long. If you specify a level of
48, the node ID has a length of 48 bits.
The maximum number of levels you can configure on a switch 10. This limit
is meaningful in a multi-peer group only. Although the level can be any value
within the 1–104 range, selecting an 8-bit boundary makes network planning
and address management easier. Four example, using 56 for a level is more
expedient than using a level of 59.
Range: 1–104 bits
Default: 56 bits
Chapter 5
Release 2.0, Part Number 78-10467-04 Rev C0, October 2001
PNNI Commands
"Disabling a

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