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Pinging RSVP-Signaled LSPs and LDP-Signaled LSPs
Enter the ping mpls command with the following syntax. Table 70 describes the ping mpls command
options.
user@host> ping mpls (ldp fec | lsp-end-point prefix-name | rsvp lsp-name)
<exp forwarding-class>
<count number> <source source-address> <detail>
To quit the ping mpls command, press Ctrl-C.
Alternatively, you can use the J-Web interface. (See Checking MPLS
Connections from the J-Web Interface.)
Table 70: CLI
ping mpls ldp and ping mpls lsp-end-point Command Options
|
ldp fec
|
Pings an LDP-signaled LSP identified by the forwarding equivalence class
(FEC) prefix and length.
|
|
lsp-end-point prefix-name
|
Pings an LSP endpoint using either an LDP FEC or a RSVP LSP endpoint
address.
|
|
rsvp lsp-name
|
Pings an RSVP-signaled LSP identified by the specified LSP name.
|
|
exp forwarding-class
|
(Optional) Specifies the value of the forwarding class to be used in
the MPLS ping packets.
|
|
countnumber
|
(Optional) Limits the number of ping requests to send. Specify a count
from 0 through 1,000,000. The default value is 5.
If you do not specify a count, ping requests are continuously sent until you
press Ctrl-C.
|
|
source source-address
|
(Optional) Uses the source address that you specify, in the ping request
packet.
|
|
detail
|
(Optional) Displays detailed output about the echo requests sent and
received. Detailed output includes the MPLS labels used for each request and
the return codes for each request.
|
Following is sample output from a ping mpls command:
user@host> ping mpls rsvp count 5
!!xxx
--- lsping statistics ---
5 packets transmitted, 2 packets received, 60% packet loss
3 packets received with error status, not counted as received.
The fields in the display are the same as those displayed by the J-Web ping
MPLS diagnostic tool. For information, see Ping MPLS
Results and Output.
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