Lucent Technologies 9077 16S User Manual

Page of 150
Monitoring and Management Tools
SP Switch Router command overview
SP Switch Router Adapter Guide - 1.4 Update 2
 
 October 22, 1999   
3-3
getver 
    
   
This command tells you the version of the operating system that is currently running. It can 
also report which release version will be run the next time the system is booted. In this case, 
getver is used in conjunction with setver. The setver command specifies which release will be 
run at the next system boot.  
grarp 
   
 
  
 
The grarp command displays the ARP table for a given IP address. If you specify grarp with 
the IP address of the SP Switch Router Adapter card, it returns a physical address that is the 
switch node number to which this card connects.
# grarp 192.146.162.67
gt030   (0): 192.146.162.67 at 0:0:0:0:0:2  
In this example, 192.146.162.67 is the IP address of the SP Switch Router Adapter card in 
slot 3 (interface name 
gt030)
, and 0:0:0:0:0:2 is the switch node number. Other grarp options 
edit, add, or remove ARP table entries.
grcard   
This command displays slot number, media type, and current operating status of the installed 
media cards.  
super> grcard
 0      FDDI_V2        running
 1      FDDI_V2        running
 2      ETHER_V1       running
 3      HSSI_V1        running
 5      HSSI_V1        running
 6      SONET_V1       running
 7      ETHER_V1       running
 8      FDDI_V2        running
 9      ATM_OC3_V2     running
 10     HIPPI_V1       running
 11     HSSI_V1        running
 12     DEV1_V1        running
 13     DEV1_V1        running
 14     ATM_OC12_V2    running
 15     ATM_OC12_V2    running
grfins      
This command installs a release onto the internal flash device. In the process, it installs all the 
new files and converts the system configuration files as required. Rebooting moves the image 
to RAM.  
As an example, if a release has a new 
/etc/gratm.conf
 file, grfins does not write over your 
current version. Instead, it installs a new version of the 
/etc/gratm.conf.template
 file. In 
this way, you can copy the current configuration information into the new 
.template
 file, 
make any changes, and then save that file as the new 
/etc/gratm.conf