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Monitoring MPLS Traffic Engineering Information

Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) traffic engineering information is divided into separate parts:

Table 50 summarizes key output fields in traffic engineering displays.

Table 50: Summary of Key MPLS Output Fields

Interfaces  

Inerface

Name of the interface on which MPLS is configured.

 

State

State of the specified interface: Up or Dn (down).

 

Administrative groups

Administratively assigned colors of the MPLS link configured on the interface.

 
LSP Information

Ingress LSP

Information about LSPs on the inbound router. Each session has one line of output.

 

Egress LSP

Information about the LSPs on the outbound router. Each session has one line of output.

MPLS learns this information by querying RSVP, which holds all the transit and outbound session information.

Transit LSP

Number of LSPs on the transit routers and the state of these paths.

MPLS learns this information by querying RSVP, which holds all the transit and outbound session information.

To

Destination (outbound router) of the session.

 

From

Source (inbound router) of the session.

 

State

State of the path. It can be Up, Down, or AdminDn.

AdminDn indicates that the LSP is being taken down gracefully.

Rt

Number of active routes (prefixes) installed in the routing table.

For inbound RSVP sessions, the routing table is the primary IPv4 table (inet.0). For transit and outbound RSVP sessions, the routing table is the primary MPLS table (mpls.0).

Active Path

Name of the active path: Primary or Secondary.

This field is used for inbound LSPs only.

P

An asterisk (*) in this column indicates that the LSP is a primary path.

This field is used for inbound LSPs only.

LSPname

Configured name of the LSP.

 

Style

RSVP reservation style. This field consists of two parts. The first is the number of active reservations. The second is the reservation style, which can be FF (fixed filter), SE (shared explicit), or WF (wildcard filter).

This field is used for outbound and transit LSPs only.

Labelin

Incoming label for this LSP.

 

Labelout

Outgoing label for this LSP.

 

Total

Total number of LSPs displayed for the particular type—ingress (inbound), egress (outbound), or transit.

 
LSP Statistics  

Ingress LSP

Information about LSPs on the inbound router. Each session has one line of output.

 

Egress LSP

Information about the LSPs on the outbound router. Each session has one line of output.

MPLS learns this information by querying RSVP, which holds all the transit and outbound session information.

Transit LSP

Number of LSPs on the transit routers and the state of these paths.

MPLS learns this information by querying RSVP, which holds all the transit and outbound session information.

To

Destination (outbound router) of the session.

 

From

Source (inbound router) of the session.

 

State

State of the path: Up, Down, or AdminDn.

AdminDn indicates that the LSP is being taken down gracefully.

Packets

Total number of packets received on the LSP from the upstream neighbor.

 

Bytes

Total number of bytes received on the LSP from the upstream neighbor.

 

LSPname

Configured name of the LSP.

 

Total

Total number of LSPs displayed for the particular type—ingress (inbound), egress (outbound), or transit.

 
RSVP Sessions  

Ingress LSP

Information about inbound RSVP sessions. Each session has one line of output.

 

Egress LSP

Information about outbound RSVP sessions. Each session has one line of output.

MPLS learns this information by querying RSVP, which holds all the transit and outbound session information.

Transit LSP

Information about transit RSVP sessions.

MPLS learns this information by querying RSVP, which holds all the transit and outbound session information.

To

Destination (outbound router) of the session.

 

From

Source (inbound router) of the session.

 

State

State of the path: Up, Down, or AdminDn.

AdminDn indicates that the LSP is being taken down gracefully.

Rt

Number of active routes (prefixes) installed in the routing table.

For inbound RSVP sessions, the routing table is the primary IPv4 table (inet.0). For transit and outbound RSVP sessions, the routing table is the primary MPLS table (mpls.0).

Style

RSVP reservation style. This field consists of two parts. The first is the number of active reservations. The second is the reservation style, which can be FF (fixed filter), SE (shared explicit), or WF (wildcard filter).

This field is used for outbound and transit LSPs only.

Labelin

Incoming label for this RSVP session.

 

Labelout

Outgoing label for this RSVP session.

 

LSPname

Configured name of the LSP.

 

Total

Total number of RSVP sessions displayed for the particular type—ingress (inbound), egress (outbound), or transit).

 
RSVP Interfaces  

RSVP Interface

Number of interfaces on which RSVP is active. Each interface has one line of output.

 

Interface

Name of the interface.

 

State

State of the interface:

  • Disabled—No traffic engineering information is displayed.
  • Down—The interface is not operational.
  • Enabled—Displays traffic engineering information.
  • Up—The interface is operational.
 

Active resv

Number of reservations that are actively reserving bandwidth on the interface.

 

Subscription

User-configured subscription factor.

 

Static BW

Total interface bandwidth, in bits per second (bps).

 

Available BW

Amount of bandwidth that RSVP is allowed to reserve, in bits per second (bps). It is equal to (static bandwidth X subscription factor).

 

Reserved BW

Currently reserved bandwidth, in bits per second (bps).

 

Highwater mark

Highest bandwidth that has ever been reserved on this interface, in bits per second (bps).

 

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