Cisco Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server Maintenance Manual
A-14
Cisco MeetingPlace Audio Server 5.2 Customer Engineering Guide (for Cisco MeetingPlace 8106)
78-16411-01
Appendix A CLI Reference
cptrace
•
cptrace -f — lists events in forward time order.
•
cptrace -h — displays the syntax for the command.
•
cptrace -p — only lists the events associated with the specified port number.
•
cptrace -r — lists the events in reverse time order. This is the default unless the -f, -t, or -b options
are used.
are used.
•
cptrace -t — lists the most recent events in the log and continues listing new events as they are
entered into the log. Use <CTRL><C> to stop the command.
entered into the log. Use <CTRL><C> to stop the command.
•
cptrace -T <number 0-5> option — lists the low-level call processing specifics.
•
cptrace -v — lists more information than the default. This is primarily for use in engineering.
•
cptrace -V — lists the link date and software release number from when the command was built.
Note
Port numbers are visible using the “activity” command or through the in-session screens on
MeetingTime. Conference numbers are unique identifiers, not the same as the meeting indentifiers
shown in MeetingTime. They are visible during the meeting by using the “activity” command. The call
processing log takes up 5 MB on the system disk. This is enough space for approximately a million
events, or approximately 10,000 calls.
MeetingTime. Conference numbers are unique identifiers, not the same as the meeting indentifiers
shown in MeetingTime. They are visible during the meeting by using the “activity” command. The call
processing log takes up 5 MB on the system disk. This is enough space for approximately a million
events, or approximately 10,000 calls.
Note
Events are flushed to the log files in batches. On an idle system, it is possible for the last log entries to
remain in memory, and not available for display, indefinitely. To force the last entries to disk, place a
new call into the system.
remain in memory, and not available for display, indefinitely. To force the last entries to disk, place a
new call into the system.
SEE ALSO