Cisco Cisco Packet Data Gateway (PDG)

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Statistics and Counters Reference, StarOS Release 16   ▄  
 
    
4395 
show linecard 
 
This chapter describes the outputs of the 
show linecard
 command. 
show linecard table 
Table 395. 
show linecard table
 Command Output Descriptions 
Field
 
Description
 
Slot 
Displays the chassis slot number and type. The slot type represents the type of card(s) that the slot 
supports. Possible slot types are: Ethernet 10/100, Ethernet 1000 line card, four-port Quad Gig-E 
(QGLC) line card (ASR 5000 only), and the10 Gigabit Ethernet Line Card (XGLC) * 
Possible slot numbers are: 17 through 23, 26 through 39, and slots 42 through 48 
*The XGLC is a full-length line card. It only fits in upper slots 17 through 23 and 26 through 32. Slots 
24 and 25 would support the Switch Processor Input/Output (SPIO) card associated for the XGLC. 
Card 
Type 
Displays the type of card installed. The possible card types supported for this release are: Ethernet 
10/100 Line Card, Ethernet 1000 Line Card (QGLC), 10 Gig Ethernet Line Card (XGLC), Switch 
Processor Input/Output Card. 
# Ports 
Displays the maximum number of physical ports supported per card. 
 
The Ethernet 10/100 Line Card supports 8 ports. 
 
The Ethernet 1000 Line Card supports 1 port. 
 
The Quad Gig-E (QGLC) Line Card supports 4 ports 
 
The 10 Gig Ethernet Line Card (XGLC) supports 1 port 
 
The Switch Processor Input/Output Card supports 2 ports. 
Oper 
State 
Displays the operational state of the card. The possible operational states are: 
 
Active: Indicates that the card is an active component that will be used to process subscriber 
data sessions. 
 
Standby: Indicates that the card is a redundant component. Redundant components will 
become active through manual configuration or automatically should a failure occur. 
 
Offline: Indicates that the card is installed but is not ready to process subscriber data sessions. 
This could be due to the fact that it is not completely installed (i.e. the card interlock switch is 
not locked, refer to the System Installation Guide for information on installing cards in the 
system) or that its processes have been halted. 
SPOF 
Displays whether or not the component is a single point of failure (SPOF) in the system. If the 
component is an SPOF, then a Yes will appear in this column. If not, a No will be displayed.