trace mpls rsvp tunnel
Syntax
trace mpls { traffic-eng | rsvp } [ vrf vrfName ] tunnel tunnelName
[ destination startIpAddress endIpAddress increment ]
[ data-size dataSize ]
[ source address sourceAddr ]
[ ttl ttlValue ] [ timeout timeOutVal ]
[ reply mode { ipv4-udp |
ipv4-udp-with-router-alert } ]
[ reply pad-tlv ] [
reply dscp trafficClass ]
[ exp-bits bitValue ] [ detail ]
Release Information
Command introduced in JunosE Release 8.0.0.
data-size keyword and dataSize variable added in JunosE Release 11.1.0.
Description
Sends MPLS echo request packets with successively
higher TTL values to the specified RSVP-TE tunnel. Discovers the path
MPLS packets follow to the destination. There is no no version.
The MPLS echo request packets and echo reply packets created
by this command use the RSVP IPv4 sub-TLV described in RFC 4379—Detecting
Multi-Protocol Label Switched (MPLS) Data Plane Failures (February
2006).
Options
- traffic-eng—Specifies optional keyword for compatibility
with non–E Series implementations
- vrfName—Name of the VRF context;
specify the VRF only when the RSVP-TE tunnel originates in the VRF
because the ping is generated from the specified VRF
- tunnelName—Name of the RSVP-TE
tunnel; can be a bypass tunnel
- startIpAddress—First IP address
within the 127.0.0.0/8 destination range
- endIpAddress—Last IP address
within the 127.0.0.0/8 destination range
- increment—Number in the range
0–255 that specifies the increment between addresses in the
destination address range
- dataSize—Size of the LSP ping
message (does not include the UDP, IP, and MPLS headers of the packet);
in the range 0–6400 bytes. The default value is 100 bytes.
- sourceAddr—IP address used
as the packet source address
- ttlValue—Hop count specified
by setting the time-to-live field in the header, in the range 1–255;
default value is 32
- timeOutVal—Number of seconds
in the range 1–32 to wait for an MPLS echo reply packet before
the connection attempt times out
- reply mode—Specifies the reply mode for the echo
request packet
- ipv4-udp—Specifies that the echo request packet
is an IPv4 UDP packet
- ipv4-udp-with-router-alert—Specifies that the echo
request packet is an IPv4 UDP packet with the router alert bit set
in the header so all routers examine this packet more closely to determine
whether further processing is necessary
- reply pad-tlv—Requests sender of an echo reply to
send a pad TLV
- trafficClass—Number in the
range 0–255 that represents the value of the traffic class that
the sender of an echo reply is requested to set
- bitValue—Value of the EXP
bits in the range 0–7 included in the MPLS echo request packet
- detail—Displays detailed information about MPLS
echo request sent and echo replies received
Mode
Privileged Exec, User Exec
Published: 2010-10-19