Deriving Interface Indices - Dell Force10 S4810P Configuration Manual

High-density, 1ru 48-port 10gbe switch
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Deriving Interface Indices

FTOS assigns an interface number to each (configured or unconfigured) physical and logical interface.
Display the interface index number using the command
shown in
Figure 46-26. Display the Interface Index Number
FTOS#show interface gig 1/21
GigabitEthernet 1/21 is up, line protocol is up
Hardware is Force10Eth, address is 00:01:e8:0d:b7:4e
Current address is 00:01:e8:0d:b7:4e
Interface index is 72925242
[output omitted]
The interface index is a binary number with bits that indicate the slot number, port number, interface type,
and card type of the interface. FTOS converts this binary index number to decimal, and displays it in the
output of the
Figure 46-27. Interface Index Binary Calculations
1 bit
1 bit
Unused
P/L Flag
Starting from the least significant bit (LSB):
the first 14 bits represent the card type
the next 4 bits represent the interface type
the next 7 bits represent the port number
the next 5 bits represent the slot number
the next 1 bit is 0 for a physical interface and 1 for a logical interface
the next 1 bit is unused
For example, the index 72925242 is 1000101 10001100000000111010 in binary. The binary interface index
for GigabitEthernet 1/21 of a 48-port 10/100/1000Base-T line card with RJ-45 interface is shown in
Figure
46-28. Notice that the physical/logical bit and the final, unused bit are not given. The interface is
physical, so this must be represented by a 0 bit, and the unused bit is always 0. These two bits are not given
because they are the most significant bits, and leading zeros are often omitted.
968
|
Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)
Figure
46-26.
command.
show interface
5 bits
Slot Number
show interface
7 bits
4 bits
Port Number
Interface Type
from EXEC Privilege mode, as
14 bits
Card Type

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