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This chapter describes the function and displays the syntax of each Novell IPX command. For more information about defaults and usage guidelines, see the corresponding chapter of the Router Products Command Reference publication.
To define a standard IPX access list, use the standard version of the access-list global configuration command. To remove a standard access list, use the no form of this command.
| accesslistnumber | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 800 to 899. |
| deny | Denies access if the conditions are matched. |
| permit | Permits access if the conditions are matched. |
| source-network | Number of the network from which the packet is being sent. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. A network number of 0 matches the local network. A network number of --1 matches all networks. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA, you can just enter AA. |
| source-node | (Optional) Node on source-network from which the packet is being sent. This is a 48-bit value represented by a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). |
| source-node-mask | (Optional) Mask to be applied to source-node. This is a 48-bit value represented as a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). Place ones in the bit positions you want to mask. |
| destination-network | (Optional) Number of the network to which the packet is being sent. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. A network number of 0 matches the local network. A network number of --1 matches all networks. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA, you can enter AA. |
| destination-node | (Optional) Node on destinationnetwork to which the packet is being sent. This is a 48bit value represented by a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). |
| destination-node- mask | (Optional) Mask to be applied to destination-node. This is a 48bit value represented as a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). Place ones in the bit positions you want to mask. |
To define an extended Novell IPX access list, use the extended version of the access-list global configuration command. To remove an extended access list, use the no form of this command.
| accesslistnumber | Number of the access list. This is a decimal number from 900 to 999. |
| deny | Denies access if the conditions are matched. |
| permit | Permits access if the conditions are matched. |
| protocol | Number of an IPX protocol type, in decimal. This also is sometimes referred to as the packet type. The IPX protocol numbers table in the Router Products Command Reference publication lists some IPX protocol numbers. |
| source-network | (Optional) Number of the network from which the packet is being sent. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. A network number of 0 matches the local network. A network number of --1 matches all networks. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA, you can just enter AA. |
| source-node | (Optional) Node on source-network from which the packet is being sent. This is a 48bit value represented by a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). |
| source-network- mask | (Optional) Mask to be applied to source-network. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal mask. Place ones in the bit positions you want to mask. The mask must immediately be followed by a period, which must in turn immediately be followed by sourcenode-mask. |
| source-node-mask | (Optional) Mask to be applied to source-node. This is a 48bit value represented as a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). Place ones in the bit positions you want to mask. |
| source-socket | Socket number from which the packet is being sent, in hexadecimal. The IPX socket numbers table in the Router Products Command Reference publication lists some IPX protocol numbers. |
| destination-network | (Optional) Number of the network to which the packet is being sent. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. A network number of 0 matches the local network. A network number of --1 matches all networks. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA, you can enter just AA. |
| destination-node | (Optional) Node on destination-network to which the packet is being sent. This is a 48-bit value represented by a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). |
| destination-network-mask | (Optional) Mask to be applied to destination-network. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal mask. Place ones in the bit positions you want to mask. The mask must immediately be followed by a period, which must in turn immediately be followed by destination-node-mask. |
| destination-node- mask | (Optional) Mask to be applied to destination-node. This is a 48-bit value represented as a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). Place ones in the bit positions you want to mask. |
| destination-socket | (Optional) Socket number to which the packet is being sent, in hexadecimal. The IPX socket numbers table in the Router Products Command Reference publication lists some IPX socket numbers. |
To define an access list for filtering Service Advertisement Protocol (SAP) requests, use the SAP filtering form of the access-list global configuration command. To remove the access list, use the no form of this command.
| accesslistnumber | Number of the SAP access list. This is a decimal number from 1000 to 1099. |
| deny | Denies access if the conditions are matched. |
| permit | Permits access if the conditions are matched. |
| network | Network number. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. A network number of 0 matches the local network. A network number of --1 matches all networks. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA, you can enter AA. |
| node | (Optional) Node on network. This is a 48bit value represented by a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx. xxxx.xxxx). |
| network.node-mask | (Optional) Mask to be applied to network and node. Place ones in the bit positions to be masked. |
| service-type | (Optional) Service type on which to filter. This is a hexadecimal number. A value of 0 means all services. The IPX SAP services table in the Router Products Command Reference publication lists examples of service types. |
| server-name | (Optional) Name of the server providing the specified service type. This can be any contiguous string of printable ASCII characters. Use double quotation marks (" ") to enclose strings containing embedded spaces. You can use an asterisk (*) at the end of the name as a wildcard to match one or more trailing characters. |
To define a set of network numbers to be part of the current NLSP area, use the area-address router configuration command. To remove a set of network numbers from the current NLSP area, use the no form of this command.
| address | Network number prefix. This is a 32-bit hexadecimal number. |
| mask | Mask that defines the length of the network number prefix. This is a 32-bit hexadecimal number. |
To delete all entries in the accounting database when IPX accounting is enabled, use the clear ipx accounting EXEC command. If the keyword is not specified, all entries in the active database are deleted.
| checkpoint | (Optional) Clears the checkpointed database. |
To delete entries from the IPX fast-switching cache, use the clear ipx cache EXEC command.
To delete all NLSP adjacencies from the router's adjacency database, use the clear ipx nlsp neighbors EXEC command.
To delete routes from the IPX routing table, use the clear ipx route EXEC command.
| network | (Optional) Number of the network whose routing table entry you want to delete. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA, you can just enter AA. |
| * | (Optional) Deletes all routes in the routing table. |
To have the Cisco 7000 series route processor recompute the entries in the IPX SSE fast-switching cache, use the clear ipx sse EXEC command.
To reinitialize the route processor on the Cisco 7000 series, use the clear sse EXEC command.
To filter networks received in updates, use the distribute-list in router configuration command. To change or cancel the filter, use the no form of this command.
| access-list-number | Standard IPX access list number in the range 800 to 899. The list explicitly specifies which networks are to be received and which are to be suppressed. |
| in | Applies the access list to incoming routing updates. |
| interface-name | (Optional) Interface on which the access list should be applied to incoming updates. If no interface is specified, the access list is applied to all incoming updates. |
To suppress networks from being advertised in updates, use the distribute-list out router configuration command. To cancel this function, use the no form of this command.
| access-list-number | Standard IPX access list number in the range 800 to 899. The list explicitly specifies which networks are to be sent and which are to be suppressed in routing updates. |
| out | Applies the access list to outgoing routing updates. |
| interface-name | (Optional) Interface on which the access list should be applied to outgoing updates. If no interface is specified, the access list is applied to all outgoing updates. |
| routing-process | (Optional) Name of a particular routing process (rip or eigrp autonomous-system-number). |
To apply a generic output filter to an interface, use ipx access-group interface configuration command. To remove the access list, use the no form of this command.
| access-list-number | Number of the access list. All outgoing packets defined with either standard or extended access lists and forwarded through the interface are filtered by the entries in this access list. For standard access lists, accesslistnumber is a decimal number from 800 to 899. For extended access lists, access-list-number is a decimal number from 900 to 999. |
To enable IPX accounting, use the ipx accounting interface configuration command. To disable IPX accounting, use the no form of this command.
To filter the networks for which IPX accounting information is kept, use the ipx accounting-list global configuration command. To remove the filter, use the no form of this command.
| number | Network number. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA you can enter AA. |
| mask | Network mask. |
To set the maximum number of accounting database entries, use the ipx accounting-threshold global configuration command. To restore the default, use the no form of this command.
| threshold | Maximum number of entries (source and destination address pairs) that the router can accumulate. The default is 512. |
To set the maximum number of transit entries that will be stored in the IPX accounting database, use the ipx accounting-transits global configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command.
| count | Number of transit entries that will be stored in the IPX accounting database. The default is 0. |
To advertise only the default route via the specified network, use the ipx advertise-default-route-only interface configuration command. To advertise all known routes out the interface, use the no form of this command.
| network | Number of the network via which to advertise the RIP default route. This is the only network advertised. |
To change the time between successive queries of each IPX Enhanced IGRP neighbor's backup server table, use the ipx backup-server-query-interval global configuration command. To restore the default time, use the no form of this command.
| interval | Minimum time, in seconds, between successive queries of each Enhanced IGRP neighbor's backup server table. The default is 15 seconds. |
To forward towards the default network, if known, all packets for which a route to the destination network is unknown, use the ipx default-route global configuration command. To discard all packets for which a route to the destination network is unknown, use the no form of this command.
To set the tick count, use the ipx delay interface configuration command. To reset the default increment in the delay field, use the no form of this command.
| ticks | Number of IBM clock ticks of delay to use. One clock tick is 1/18th of a second (approximately 55 milliseconds). The default is determined from the delay configured on the interface with the delay command. It is (interface delay + 333) / 334. |
To administratively shut down an IPX network, use the ipx down interface configuration command. To restart the network, use the no form of this command.
| network | Number of the network to shut down. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA, you can enter AA. |
To disable the sending of replies to IPX GNS queries, use the ipx gns-reply-disable interface configuration command. To return to the default, use the no form of this command.
To change the delay when responding to Get Nearest Server (GNS) requests, use the ipx gnsresponsedelay global configuration command. To return to the default delay, use the no form of this command.
| milliseconds | (Optional) Time, in milliseconds, that the router waits after receiving a Get Nearest Server request from an IPX client before responding with a server name to that client. The default is zero, which indicates no delay. |
To rotate using a round-robin selection method through a set of eligible servers when responding to Get Nearest Server (GNS) requests, use the ipx gns-round-robin global configuration command. To use the most recently learned server, use the no form of this command.
To configure the interval between IPX Enhanced IGRP hello packets, use the ipx hello-interval eigrp interface configuration command. To restore the default interval, use the no form of this command.
| autonomous-system-number | Autonomous system number. It can be a decimal integer from 1 to 65535. |
| seconds | Interval between hello packets, in seconds. The default interval is 5 seconds, which is one-third of the default hold time. |
To forward broadcast packets (except type 20 propagation packets) to a specified server, use the ipx helper-address interface configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command.
| network | Network on which the target IPX server resides. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. A network number of --1 indicates all-nets flooding. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA you can enter AA. |
| node | Node number of the target Novell server. This is a 48-bit value represented by a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). A node number of FFFF.FFFF.FFFF matches all servers. |
To assign an access list to an interface to control broadcast traffic (including type 20 propagation packets), use the ipx helper-list interface configuration command. To remove the access list from an interface, use the no form of this command.
| access-list-number | Number of the access list. All outgoing packets defined with either standard or extended access lists are filtered by the entries in this access list. For standard access lists, access-list-number is a decimal number from 800 to 899. For extended access lists, it is a decimal number from 900 to 999. |
To specify the length of time a neighbor should consider IPX Enhanced IGRP hello packets valid, use the ipx holdtime eigrp interface configuration command. To restore the default time, use the no form of this command.
| autonomous-system-number | IPX Enhanced IGRP autonomous system number. It can be a decimal integer from 1 to 65535. |
| seconds | Hold time, in seconds. The hold time is advertised in hello packets and indicates to neighbors the length of time they should consider the sender valid. The default hold time is 15 seconds, which is three times the hello interval. |
To control which networks are added to the router's routing table, use the ipx input-network-filter interface configuration command. To remove the filter from the interface, use the no form of this command.
| access-list-number | Number of the access list. All incoming packets defined with either standard or extended access lists are filtered by the entries in this access list. For standard access lists, accesslist-number is a decimal number from 800 to 899. For extended access lists, it is a decimal number from 900 to 999. |
To control which services are added to the router's SAP table, use the ipx input-sap-filter interface configuration command. To remove the filter, use the no form of this command.
| access-list-number | Number of the SAP access list. All incoming packets are filtered by the entries in this access list. The argument accesslistnumber is a decimal number from 1000 to 1099. |
To set an internal network number for use by NLSP and IPXWAN, use the ipx internal-network global configuration command. To remove an internal network number, use the no form of this command.
| network-number | Number of the internal network. |
To configure the IPXWAN protocol on a serial interface, use the ipx ipxwan interface configuration command. To disable the IPXWAN protocol, use the no form of this command.
| local-node | (Optional) Primary network number of the router. This is an IPX network number that is unique across the entire internet. On NetWare 3.x servers, the primary network number is called the internal network number. The router with the higher number is determined to be the link master. A value of 0 causes the router to use the configured internal network number. |
| network-number | (Optional) IPX network number to be used if this router is the one determined to be the link master. The number is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. A value 0 is equivalent to specifying the keyword unnumbered. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA you can enter AA. |
| unnumbered | (Optional) Specifies that no IPX network number is defined for the link. This is equivalent to specifying a value of 0 for the network-number argument. |
| local-server-name | (Optional) Name of the local router. It can be up to 47 characters long, and can contain uppercase letters, digits, underscores (_), hyphens (--), and at signs (@). On NetWare 3.x servers, this is the router name. For our routers, this is the name of the router as configured via the hostname command (that is, the name that precedes the standard prompt, which is an angle bracket (>) for EXEC mode or a pound sign (#) for privileged EXEC mode). |
| retry-interval | (Optional) Retry interval, in seconds. This interval defines how often the router will retry the IPXWAN startup negotiation if a startup failure occurs. Retries will occur until the retry limit defined by the retry-limit argument is reached. It can be a value from 1 through 600. The default is 20 seconds. |
| retry-limit | (Optional) Maximum number of times the router retries the IPXWAN startup negotiation before taking the action defined by the ipx ipxwan error command. It can be a value from 1 through 100. The default is 3. |
To define how to handle IPXWAN when a serial link fails, use the ipx ipxwan error interface configuration command. To restore the default, use the no form of this command.
| reset | (Optional) Resets the link when it fails. This is the default action. |
| resume | (Optional) When a link fails, IPXWAN ignores the failure, takes no special action, and resumes the connection. |
| shutdown | (Optional) Shuts down the link when it fails. |
To negotiate static routes on a link configured for IPXWAN, use the ipx ipxwan static interface configuration command. To disable static route negotiation, use the no form of this command.
To specify the link delay, use the ipx link-delay interface configuration command. To return to the default link delay, which is no delay, use the no form of this command.
| microseconds | Delay, in microseconds. The default is no link delay (a delay of 0). |
To set the maximum hop count allowed for IPX packets, use the ipx maximum-hop global configuration command. To return to the default number of hops, use the no form of this command.
| hops | Maximum number of hops considered to be reachable by non-RIP routing protocols. Also, maximum number of routers that an IPX packet can traverse before being dropped. It can be a value from 16 through 254. The default is 16 hops. |
To set the maximum number of equal-cost paths the router uses when forwarding packets, use the ipx maximum-paths global configuration command. To restore the default value, use the no form of this command.
| paths | Maximum number of equal-cost paths which the router will use. It can be an integer from 1 to 512. The default is 1. |
To control incoming IPX NetBIOS messages, use the ipx netbios inputaccess-filter interface configuration command. To remove the filter, use the no form of this command.
| host | Indicates that the following argument is the name of a NetBIOS access filter previously defined with one or more netbios access-list host commands. |
| bytes | Indicates that the following argument is the name of a NetBIOS access filter previously defined with one or more netbios access-list bytes commands. |
| name | Name of a NetBIOS access list. |
To control outgoing NetBIOS messages, use the ipx netbios outputaccess-filter interface configuration command. To remove the filter, use the no form of this command.
| host | Indicates that the following argument is the name of a NetBIOS access filter previously defined with one or more netbios access-list host commands. |
| bytes | Indicates that the following argument is the name of a NetBIOS access filter previously defined with one or more netbios access-list bytes commands. |
| name | Name of a previously defined NetBIOS access list. |
To enable IPX routing on a particular interface and to optionally select the type of encapsulation (framing), use the ipx network interface configuration command. To disable IPX routing, use the no form of this command.
| number | Network number. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA you can enter AA. |
| encapsulation encapsulation- type | (Optional) Type of encapsulation. It can be one of the following values: · arpa (for Ethernet interfaces only)---Use Novell's Ethernet_II encapsulation. This encapsulation is recommended for networks that handle both TCP/IP and IPX traffic. · hdlc (for serial interfaces only)---Use HDLC encapsulation. · novell-ether (for Ethernet interfaces only)---Use Novell's "Ethernet_802.3" encapsulation, which consists of a standard 802.3 MAC header followed directly by the IPX header with a checksum of FFFF. It is the default encapsulation used by NetWare Version 3.11. · sap (for Ethernet interfaces)---Use Novell's Ethernet_802.2 encapsulation, which consists of a standard 802.3 MAC header followed by an 802.2 LLC header. This is the default encapsulation used by NetWare Version 4.0.(for Token Ring interfaces)---This encapsulation consists of a standard 802.5 MAC header followed by an 802.2 LLC header.(for FDDI interfaces)---This encapsulation consists of a standard FDDI MAC header followed by an 802.2 LLC header. · snap (for Ethernet interfaces)---Use Novell Ethernet_Snap encapsulation, which consists of a standard 802.3 MAC header followed by an 802.2 SNAP LLC header.(for Token Ring and FDDI interfaces)--- This encapsulation consists of a standard 802.5 or FDDI MAC header followed by an 802.2 SNAP LLC header. |
| secondary | (Optional) Indicates an additional (secondary) network configured after the first (primary) network. |
To configure the NLSP complete sequence number PDU (CSNP) interval, use the ipx nlsp csnp-interval interface configuration command. To restore the default value, use the no form of this command.
| seconds | Time, in seconds, between the transmission of CSNPs on multiaccess networks. This interval applies to the designated router only. The interval can be a number in the range 1 to 600. The default is 30 seconds. |
To enable NLSP routing on the primary network configured on this interface or subinterface, use the ipx nlsp enable interface configuration command. To disable NLSP routing on the primary network configured on this interface or subinterface, use the no form of this command.
To configure the interval between the transmission of hello packets, use the ipx nlsp hello-interval interface configuration command. To restore the default value, use the no form of this command.
| seconds | Time, in seconds, between the transmission of hello packets on the interface. It can be a decimal integer in the range 1 to 1600. The default is 10 seconds for the designated router and 20 seconds for nondesignated routers. |
To configure the NLSP cost for an interface, use the ipx nlsp metric interface configuration command. To restore the default cost, use the no form of this command.
| metric-number | Metric value for the interface. It can be a decimal integer from 0 to 63. The default varies based on the throughput of the link connected to the interface. |
To configure the election priority of the specified interface for designated router election, use the ipx nlsp priority interface configuration command. To restore the default priority, use the no form of this command.
| priority-number | Election priority of the designated router for the specified interface. This can be a number in the range 0 to 127. This value is unitless. The default is 44. |
To configure the link-state packet (LSP) retransmission interval on WAN links, use the ipx nlsp retransmit-interval interface configuration command. To restore the default interval, use the no form of this command.
| seconds | LSP retransmission interval, in seconds. This can be a number in the range 1 to 30. The default is 5 seconds. |
To configure RIP compatibility when NLSP is enabled, use the ipx nlsp rip interface configuration command. To restore the default, use the no form of this command.
| on | (Optional) Always generates and sends RIP periodic traffic. |
| off | (Optional) Never generates and sends RIP periodic traffic. |
| auto | (Optional) Sends RIP periodic traffic only if another RIP router in sending periodic RIP traffic. This is the default. |
To configure SAP compatibility when NLSP in enabled, use the ipx nlsp sap interface configuration command. To restore the default, use the no form of this command.
| on | (Optional) Always generates and sends SAP periodic traffic. |
| off | (Optional) Never generates and sends SAP periodic traffic. |
| auto | (Optional) Sends SAP periodic traffic only if another SAP router in sending periodic SAP traffic. This is the default. |
To control which servers are included in the Get Nearest Server (GNS) responses sent by the router, use the ipx output-gns-filter interface configuration command. To remove the filter from the interface, use the no form of this command.
| access-list-number | Number of the SAP access list. All outgoing GNS packets are filtered by the entries in this access list. The argument accesslistnumber is a decimal number from 1000 to 1099. |
To control the list of networks included in routing updates sent out an interface, use the ipx outputnetwork-filter interface configuration command. To remove the filter from the interface, use the no form of this command.
| access-list-number | Number of the access list. All outgoing packets defined with either standard or extended access lists are filtered by the entries in this access list. For standard access lists, accesslist-number is a decimal number from 800 to 899. For extended access lists, it is a decimal number from 900 to 999. |
To adjust the delay between the individual packets sent in a multiple-packet routing update, use the ipx outputrip-delay interface configuration command. To return to the default value, use the no form of this command.
| delay | Delay, in milliseconds, between packets in a multipacket RIP update. The default delay is 0 (that is, no delay). The delay recommended by Novell is 55 ms. |
To set a delay between packets sent in a multipacket Service Advertisement Protocol (SAP) update, use the ipx output-sap-delay interface configuration command. To disable the delay mechanism, use the no form of this command.
| delay | Delay, in milliseconds, between packets in a multipacket SAP update. The default delay is 0 (that is, no delay). The delay recommended by Novell is 55 ms. |
To control which services are included in Service Advertisement Protocol (SAP) updates sent by the router, use the ipx output-sap-filter interface configuration command. To remove the filter, use the no form of this command.
| access-list-number | Number of the SAP access list. All outgoing service advertisements are filtered by the entries in this access list. The argument access-list-number is a decimal number from 1000 to 1099. |
To control whether odd-length packets are padded so as to be sent as even-length packets on an interface, use the ipx padprocessswitchedpackets interface configuration command. To disable padding, use the no form of this command.
| cisco | Transmits standard Cisco pings. This is the default. |
| novell | Transmits standard Novell pings. |
To configure the maximum packet size of RIP updates sent out the interface, use the ipx rip-max-packetsize interface configuration command. To restore the default packet size, use the no form of this command.
| bytes | Maximum packet size in bytes. The default is 432 bytes, which allows for 50 routes at 8 bytes each plus a 32-byte IPX RIP header. |
To configure the interval at which a network's or server's RIP entry ages out, use the ipx rip-multiplier interface configuration command. To restore the default interval, use the no form of this command.
| multiplier | Multiplier used to calculate the interval at which to age out RIP routing table entries. This can be any positive integer. The value you specify is multiplied by the RIP update interval to determine the aging-out interval. The default is three times the RIP update interval. |
To add a static route to the routing table, use the ipx route global configuration command. To remove a route from the routing table, use the no form of this command.
| network | Network to which you want to establish a static route. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA, you can just enter AA. |
| default | Default network number as defined by the ipx default-route global configuration command. |
| network.node | Router to which to forward packets destined for the specified network. The argument network is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA, you can enter AA. The argument node is the node number of the target router. This is a 48bit value represented by a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). |
| floating-static | (Optional) Specifies that this route is a floating-static route. This is a static route that can be overridden by a dynamically learned route. |
To enable IPX fast switching and autonomous switching, use the ipx route-cache interface configuration command. To disable fast switching, use the no form of this command. If no keywords are specified, fast switching is enabled. By default, fast switching is enabled, and autonomous switching and SSE switching are disabled.
| cbus | (Optional) Enables IPX autonomous switching. |
| sse | (Optional) Enables SSE fast switching. |
To specify the routing protocol to use, use the ipx router global configuration command.
| eigrp autonomous-system-number | Enables the Enhanced IGRP routing protocol. The argument autonomous-system-number is the IPX Enhanced IGRP autonomous system number. It can be a decimal integer from 1 to 65535. |
| nlsp | Enables the NLSP routing protocol. |
| rip | Enables the RIP routing protocol. It is on by default. |
To control the routers from which packets are accepted, use the ipx router-filter interface configuration command. To remove the filter from the interface, use the no form of this command.
| access-list-number | Number of the access list. All incoming packets defined with either standard or extended access lists are filtered by the entries in this access list. For standard access lists, accesslist-number is a decimal number from 800 to 899. For extended access lists, it is a decimal number from 900 to 999. |
To filter Service Advertisement Protocol (SAP) messages received from a particular router, use the ipx routersap-filter interface configuration command. To remove the filter, use the no form of this command.
| access-list-number | Number of the access list. All incoming service advertisements are filtered by the entries in this access list. The argument access-list-number is a decimal number from 1000 to 1099. |
To enable IPX routing, use the ipx routing global configuration command. To disable IPX routing, use the no form of this command.
| node | (Optional) Node number of the router. This is a 48-bit value represented by a dotted triplet of four-digit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). It must not be a multicast address. If you omit node, the router uses the hardware MAC address currently assigned to it as its node address. This is the MAC address of the first Ethernet, Token Ring, or FDDI interface card. If no satisfactory interfaces are present in the router (such as only serial interfaces), you must specify node. |
To specify static Service Advertisement Protocol (SAP) entries, use the ipx sap global configuration command. To remove static SAP entries, use the no form of this command.
| service-type | SAP service-type number. The sample IPX SAP services table in the Router Products Command Reference lists some IPX SAP services. |
| name | Name of the server that provides the service. |
| network.node | Network number and node address of the server. The argument network is an eightdigit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA you can enter just AA. The argument node is the node number of the target Novell server. This is a 48bit value represented by a dotted triplet of fourdigit hexadecimal numbers (xxxx.xxxx.xxxx). |
| socket | Socket number for this service. The IPX socket numbers table in the Router Products Command Reference publication lists some IPX socket numbers. |
| hop-count | Number of hops to the server. |
To send SAP updates only when a change occurs in the SAP table, use the ipx sapincremental eigrp interface configuration command. To send periodic SAP updates, use the no form of this command.
| autonomous-system-number | (Optional) IPX Enhanced IGRP autonomous system number. It can be a decimal integer from 1 to 65535. |
| rsup-only | (Optional) Indicates that the system uses Enhanced IGRP on this interface to carry reliable SAP update information only. RIP routing updates are used, and Enhanced IGRP routing updates are ignored. |
To configure less frequent Service Advertisement Protocol (SAP) updates over slow links, use the ipx sap-interval interface configuration command. To return to the default value, use the no form of this command.
| interval | Interval, in minutes, between SAP updates sent by the router. The default value is 1 minute. If interval is 0, periodic updates are never sent. |
To configure the maximum packet size of SAP updates sent out the interface, use the ipx sap-max-packetsize interface configuration command. To restore the default packet size, use the no form of this command.
| bytes | Maximum packet size in bytes. The default is 480 bytes, which allows for seven servers (64 bytes each) plus a 32-byte IPX SAP header. |
To configure the interval at which a network's or server's SAP entry ages out, use the ipx sap-multiplier interface configuration command. To restore the default interval, use the no form of this command.
| multiplier | Multiplier used to calculate the interval at which to age out SAP routing table entries. This can be any positive integer. The value you specify is multiplied by the SAP update interval to determine the aging-out interval. The default is three times the SAP update interval. |
To configure the maximum length of the queue of pending input SAP GNS requests and SAP query packets, use the ipx sapqueuemaximum global configuration command. To return to the default value, use the no form of this command.
| number | Maximum length of the queue of pending SAP requests. By default, there is no limit to the number of pending SAP requests that the router stores in this queue. |
To repair corrupted network numbers, use the ipx sourcenetworkupdate interface configuration command. To disable this feature, use the no form of this command.
To configure split horizon, use the ipx split-horizon eigrp interface configuration command. To disable split horizon, use the no form of this command.
| autonomous-system-number | IPX Enhanced IGRP autonomous system number. It can be a decimal integer from 1 to 65535. |
To configure the throughput, use the ipx throughput interface configuration command. To restore the default throughput, use the no form of this command.
| bits-per-second | Throughput, in bits per second. No default throughput is defined. |
To forward IPX type 20 propagation packet broadcasts to specific network segments, use the ipx type-20-helpered interface configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command.
To restrict the acceptance of IPX type 20 propagation packet broadcasts, use the ipx type20inputchecks global configuration command. To remove these restrictions, use the no form of this command.
To restrict the forwarding of IPX type 20 propagation packet broadcasts, use the ipx type20outputchecks global configuration command. To remove these restrictions, use the no form of this command.
To forward IPX type 20 propagation packet broadcasts to other network segments, use the ipx type20-propagation interface configuration command. To disable both the reception and forwarding of type 20 broadcasts on an interface, use the no form of this command.
To adjust the IPX routing update timers, use the ipx update-time interface configuration command. To restore the default value, use the no form of this command.
| interval | Interval, in seconds, at which IPX routing updates are sent. The default is 60 seconds. The minimum interval is 10 seconds. |
To have the router respond to a server's watchdog packets on behalf of a remote client, use the ipx watchdogspoof interface configuration command. To disable spoofing, use the no form of this command.
To set the minimum interval at which link-state packets (LSPs) are generated, use the lsp-gen-interval router configuration command. To restore the default interval, use the no form of this command.
| seconds | Minimum interval, in seconds. It can be a number in the range 0 through 120. The default is 5 seconds. |
To set the maximum size of a link-state packet (LSP), use the lsp-mtu router configuration command. To restore the default MTU size, use the no form of this command.
| bytes | MTU size, in bytes. It can be a decimal number in the range 512 through 4096. The default is 512 bytes. |
To set the link-state packet (LSP) refresh interval, use the lsp-refresh-interval router configuration command. To restore the default refresh interval, use the no form of this command.
| seconds | Refresh interval, in seconds. It can be a value in the range 1 through 50000 seconds. The default is 7200 seconds. |
To set the maximum time that link-state packets (LSPs) persist, use the max-lsp-lifetime router configuration command. To restore the default time, use the no form of this command.
| seconds | Lifetime of LSP, in seconds. It can be a number in the range 1 through 50000 seconds. The default is 7500 seconds. |
To define an IPX NetBIOS access list filter, use the netbios access-list interface configuration command. To remove a filter, use the no form of the command.
| host | Indicates that the following argument is the name of a NetBIOS access filter previously defined with one or more netbios access-list host commands. |
| bytes | Indicates that the following argument is the name of a NetBIOS access filter previously defined with one or more netbios access-list bytes commands. |
| name | Name of the access list being defined. The name can be an alphanumeric string. |
| deny | Denies access if the conditions are matched. |
| permit | Permits access if the conditions are matched. |
| string | Character string that identifies one or more NetBIOS host names. It can be up to 14 characters long. The argument string can include the following wildcard characters: · *---Match one or more characters. You can use this wildcard character only at the end of a string. · ?---Match any single character. |
| offset | Decimal number that indicates the number of bytes into the packet at which the byte comparison should begin. An offset of 0 indicates the beginning of the NetBIOS packet header, which is at the end of the IPX header. |
| byte-pattern | Hexadecimal pattern that represents the byte pattern to match. It can be up to 16 bytes (32 digits) long and must be an even number of digits. The argument bytepattern can include the following wildcard character: · **---Match any digits for that byte. |
To enable IPX Enhanced IGRP on the router, use the network IPX-router configuration command. To disable IPX Enhanced IGRP on the router, use the no form of this command.
| network-number | IPX network number. |
| all | Enables the routing protocol for all IPX networks configured on the router. |
To check host reachability and network connectivity, use the ping privileged EXEC command.
| ipx | (Optional) Specifies the IPX protocol. |
| address | (Optional) Address of system to ping. |
To check host reachability and network connectivity, use the ping ipx user EXEC command.
| ipx | Specifies the IPX protocol. |
| host | Host name of system to ping. |
| address | Address of system to ping. |
To redistribute from one routing domain into another, and vice versa, use the redistribute IPX-router configuration command. To disable this feature, use the no form of this command.
| rip | Specifies the RIP protocol. |
| eigrp autonomous-system-number | Specifies the Enhanced IGRP protocol and the autonomous system number. It can be a decimal integer from 1 to 65535. |
| connected | Specifies connected routes. |
| static | Specifies static routes. |
| floating-static | Specifies a floating static route. This is a static route that can be overridden by a dynamically learned route. |
To display the active accounting or checkpointed database, use the show ipx accounting EXEC command.
| checkpoint | (Optional) Displays entries in the checkpointed database. |
To display the contents of the IPX fast-switching cache, use the show ipx cache EXEC command.
To display the neighbors discovered by Enhanced IGRP, use the show ipx eigrp neighbors EXEC command.
| servers | (Optional) Displays the server list advertised by each neighbor. This is displayed only if the ipx sap incremental command is enabled on the interface on which the neighbor resides. |
| autonomous-system-number | (Optional) Autonomous system number. It can be a decimal integer from 1 to 65535. |
| interface | (Optional) Interface type and number. |
To display the IPX enhanced IGRP topology table, use the show ipx eigrp topology EXEC command.
| network-number | (Optional) IPX network number whose topology table entry to display |
To display the status of the IPX interfaces configured in the router and the parameters configured on each interface, use the show ipx interface privileged EXEC command.
| type | (Optional) Interface type. It can be one of the following types: asynchronous, dialer, Ethernet (IEEE 802.3), FDDI, loopback, null, serial, Token Ring, or tunnel. |
| number | (Optional) Interface number. |
To display the entries in the link-state packet (LSP) database, use the show ipx nlsp database EXEC command.
| lspid | (Optional) Link-state protocol ID (LSPID). You must specify this in the format xxxx.xxxx.xxxx.yy-zz or name.yy-zz. |
| detail | (Optional) Displays the contents of the LSP database entries. If you omit this keyword, only a summary display is shown. |
To display the router's NLSP neighbors and their states, use the show ipx nlsp neighbors EXEC command.
| interface | (Optional) Interface type and number. |
| detail | (Optional) Displays detailed information about the neighbor. If you omit this keyword, only a summary display is shown. |
To display the contents of the IPX routing table, use the show ipx route user EXEC command.
| network | (Optional) Number of the network whose routing table entry you want to display. This is an eight-digit hexadecimal number that uniquely identifies a network cable segment. It can be a number in the range 1 to FFFFFFFD. You do not need to specify leading zeros in the network number. For example, for the network number 000000AA, you can just enter AA. |
| default | (Optional) Displays the default route. |
| detailed | (Optional) Displays detailed route information. |
To list the IPX servers discovered through SAP advertisements, use the show ipx servers user EXEC command.
| unsorted | (Optional) Does not sort entries when displaying IPX servers. |
| sorted | (Optional) Sorts the display of IPX servers according to the keyword that follows. |
| name | (Optional) Displays the IPX servers alphabetically by server name. |
| net | (Optional) Displays the IPX servers numerically by network number. |
| type | (Optional) Displays the IPX servers numerically by SAP service type. This is the default. |
To display information about the number and type of IPX packets transmitted and received by the router, use the show ipx traffic user EXEC command.
To control how often the router performs the Shortest Path First (SPF) calculation, use the spf-interval router configuration command. To restore the default interval, use the no form of this command.
| seconds | Minimum amount of time between Shortest Path First (SPF) calculations, in seconds. It can be a number in the range 1 through 120. The default is 5 seconds. |
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