198
C
HAPTER
7: IP S
ERVICES
C
OMMANDS
Examples
— The following example traces the route to host server1:
WX4400#
traceroute server1
traceroute to server1.example.com (192.168.22.7), 30 hops max, 38 byte packets
1 engineering-1.example.com (192.168.192.206) 2 ms 1 ms 1 ms
2 engineering-2.example.com (192.168.196.204) 2 ms 3 ms 2 ms
3 gateway_a.example.com (192.168.1.201) 6 ms 3 ms 3 ms
4 server1.example.com (192.168.22.7) 3 ms * 2 ms
The first row of the display indicates the target host, the maximum
number of hops, and the packet size. Each numbered row displays
information about one hop. The rows are displayed in the order in which
the hops occur, beginning with the hop closest to the WX switch.
The row for a hop lists the total time in milliseconds for each ICMP packet
to reach the router or host, plus the time for the ICMP Time Exceeded
message to return to the host.
An exclamation point (!) following any of these values indicates that the
Port Unreachable message returned by the destination has a maximum
hop count of 0 or 1. This can occur if the destination uses the maximum
hop count value from the arriving packet as the maximum hop count in
its ICMP reply. The reply does not arrive at the source until the destination
receives a traceroute packet with a maximum hop count equal to the
number of hops between the source and destination.
An asterisk (*) indicates that the timeout period expired before MSS
received a Time Exceeded message for the packet.
If Traceroute receives an ICMP error message other than a Time Exceeded
or Port Unreachable message, MSS displays one of the error codes
described in Table 40 instead of displaying the round-trip time or an
asterisk (*).
Table 40 describes the traceroute error messages.
Table 40
Error messages for traceroute
Field
Description
!N
No route to host. The network is unreachable.
!H
No route to host. The host is unreachable.
!P
Connection refused. The protocol is unreachable.
Summary of Contents for OfficeConnect WX1200
Page 36: ...36 CHAPTER 2 ACCESS COMMANDS...
Page 62: ...62 CHAPTER 3 SYSTEM SERVICE COMMANDS...
Page 200: ...200 CHAPTER 7 IP SERVICES COMMANDS...
Page 264: ...264 CHAPTER 8 AAA COMMANDS...
Page 272: ...272 CHAPTER 9 MOBILITY DOMAIN COMMANDS...
Page 392: ...392 CHAPTER 11 MANAGED ACCESS POINT COMMANDS...
Page 444: ...444 CHAPTER 13 IGMP SNOOPING COMMANDS...
Page 468: ...468 CHAPTER 14 SECURITY ACL COMMANDS...
Page 484: ...484 CHAPTER 15 CRYPTOGRAPHY COMMANDS...
Page 532: ...532 CHAPTER 18 SESSION MANAGEMENT COMMANDS...
Page 588: ...588 CHAPTER 20 FILE MANAGEMENT COMMANDS...
Page 596: ...596 CHAPTER 21 TRACE COMMANDS...
Page 608: ...608 CHAPTER 22 SNOOP COMMANDS...
Page 618: ...618 CHAPTER 23 SYSTEM LOG COMMANDS...