show

The show command displays Oracle Communications Session Border Controller statistics, configurations, and other information. Many of the show commands display period and lifetime statistic counts.

show about

This command displays credit information including version number for the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller. It also shows current third party licenses applicable to the software image you are running.

Syntax

show about

Example

ORACLE# show about 

show acl

Syntax

show acl <arguments>
		

Arguments

denied—Display denied ACL entries

untrusted—Display untrusted ACL entries

trusted—Display trusted ACL entries

info—Display amount of table space used by ACL entries. Number of entries, percent utilization, and maximum entries are displayed for each ACL type. The following are the ACL types displayed:
  • Denied
  • Trusted
  • Media
  • Untrusted
  • Dynamic-trusted

reset—Reset the summary counts of all host ACL entries

summary—Displays cumulative and per-interface statistics on ACL traffic and drops, displaying Recent, Total and PerMax counts. The parameter also separates the display of traffic from trusted versus untrusted sites.

ip—Display the same output as show acl all, but takes an IP address as an argument to filter all ACL statistics for the given IP address

all—Display all ACL entries

Example

ORACLE# show acl untrusted

show accounting

This command displays a summary of statistics for configured external accounting servers.

Syntax

show accounting [[<IPPort> | All] [<DiamMsg>]] | [connections]

Arguments

Entered without any arguments, the show accounting command displays the global Accounting Status Summary, returning the equivalent of the show accounting all command but without per-server message statistics.

IPPort — identifies the IP address of the accounting server and the specific port for which you want to show information, in the form IP_Address:port. This is useful when an Rf server has multiple connections to multiple external servers.

All — displays the statistics for all accounting servers

DiamMsg — identifies a specific Diameter message for which you want to show information. The accepted diameter messages are:
  • AAR — Authorization-Authentication Request
  • ASR — Abort-Session-Request
  • CER — Capabilities-Exchange-Request
  • DWR — Device-Watchdog-Request. The display table for DWR has two sections: DWR Sent and DWR Received.
  • RAR — Re-Authorization-Request
  • STR — Session-Termination-Request

connections — displays a table listing socket connection information for all Rf servers

Example

ORACLE# show accounting 192.168.81.81:1813

show algd

Displays ALGD statistics for either a specified command or all command statistics.

Syntax

show algd <algd-stats>

Arguments

Entered without any arguments, the show algd command displays all ALG statistics.

statistics—Display statistics

errors—Display error statistics

acls—Display ACL statistics

rsip—Display RSIP command statistics

rqnt—Display RQNT command statistics

ntfy—Display NTFY command statistics

crcx—Display CRCX command statistics

mdcx—Display MDCX command statistics

dlcx—Display DLCX command statistics

auep—Display AUEP command statistics

aucx—Display AUCX command statistics

epcf—Display EPCF command statistics

other—Display other command statistics

redundancy—Display redundancy statistics

all—Display all ALG statistics


Note:

Executing the show algd command with no arguments returns the equivalent of the show algd statistics command.

Example

ORACLE# show algd rsip 

show arp

This command displays the current Internet-to-Ethernet address mappings in the ARP table as well as statistics related to arp resolutions and its traffic.

Syntax

show arp [info | statistics]

Arguments

Entered without an argument, the show arp command displays the current Internet-to-Ethernet address mappings in the ARP table.

The first section displays the Link Level ARP table including:

  • destination address
  • ARP gateway
  • flags
  • reference count
  • use
  • physical interface on the system.
The second section displays the following information that refers only to media interfaces:
  • interface
  • VLAN
  • IP Address
  • MAC address
  • time stamp
  • type

The third section shows general ARP table information.

info—Displays the layer 2 and network interface tables for arp database size and number of entries.

statistics—Displays ARP statistics counters for received traffic, transmitted traffic and internal errors.

The first section shows statistics on ARP traffic received.

  • Add intf—Number of the added intfs and number of the add failures.
  • Delete intf—Number of the deleted intfs and number of the deletion failures.
  • Flush intf—Number of the flushed intfs and number of the flushing failures. (L2 resolver flushes the interfaces to get rid of the invalid ports.)
  • Add dynamic—Number of the added dynamic l2 entries and number of the add failures.
  • Add static—Number of the added static l2 entries and number of the add failures.
  • Delete dynamic—Number of the deleted dynamic l2 entries and number of the deletion failures.
  • Delete static—Number of the deleted static l2 entries and number of the deletion failures.
  • Pend—Number of the received l2 messages pending on processing, number of the pending errors, and number of the dropped pending msgs
  • Request—Number of the total received l2 requests, number of the request updates, and number of the dropped invalid requests.
  • Reply—Number of the total received l2 replies, number of the reply updates, and number of the dropped invalid replies.
  • Network—Number of the total received l2 messages from wire, and number of the errors in validating the received l2 messages, which includes invalid l2 packets, subnet errors, ip errors, invalid operations, and net interface errors.
  • L2 Pkts—Number of the received invalid l2 packets.
  • Subnet—Number of the ip errors.
  • Intf—Number of the net intf errors.
  • IP—Number of the net intf errors.
  • Operation—Number of the net operations errors.

The second section shows statistics on ARP traffic transmitted.

  • Request—Number of ARP requests sent for both success and error cases.
  • Reply—Number of ARP replies sent for both success and error cases.
  • Pend—Number of pending ARP requests for both success and error cases.
  • Network—Number of ARP messages sent to network device for both success and error cases.
  • Expire—Number of expired/aged ARP entries for both success and error cases.

show backup-config

Syntax

show backup-config <config-file>

Arguments

<config-file> Enter the name of the saved configuration file

The show backup-config command displays a specified configuration file saved on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller’s standard backup file directory.

Example

ORACLE# show backup-config config1_25jun.gz

show buffers

Syntax

show buffers <histogram | usage>

This command shows memory buffer statistics. Use this command only for debugging purposes under the direction of Oracle support.

Example

ORACLE# show buffers

show built-in-sip-manipulations

This command displays the name of all built-in SIP-manipulations and descriptions.

Syntax

show built-in-sip-manipulations

Example

ORACLE# show built-in-sip-manipulations 

show call-recording-server

This command displays information regarding the IP call replication for call recording (IPRCR) feature configured on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller. Entering this command without the optional IPRCR ID displays all IPRCR endpoints configured on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller along with their state.

Syntax

show call-recording-server [crs-id]

Arguments

[crs-id] You can specify a IPRCR whose information you want to view. When you specify an ID, the ACLI displays all session agents created for the IPRCR endpoint, it’s IP address, its state, and the last time a failover occurred.

Example

ORACLE# show call-recording-server crs1

show clock

This command displays the current date and time for your Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Syntax

show clock

Example

ORACLE# show clock 

show comm-monitor

Syntax

show comm-monitor <by-client client-IP> | <errors> | <internal> | stats

Displays statistics related to connections between the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller's Communications Monitor probe and any configured Communications Monitor servers. The maximum statistic value is 999999, after which the system restarts the counters from zero.

Running the command without arguments displays the following information:
  • Client connection states, presented in a connection sequence order, including:
    • Out-of-Service – Connection is not established.
    • Connecting – Trying to Connect to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.
    • Connected – Oracle Communications Session Border Controller connected but not able to collect stats.
    • In-Service – Oracle Communications Session Border Controller connected and able to collect stats.
  • Aggregate Socket Statistics, including:
    • Socket Message Sent—Number of Socket Message Sent.
    • Socket Message Dropped—Number of Socket Messages dropped
    • Socket Send Error—Number of Socket Send Errors
    • Socket Not Ready—Number of Sockets Not Ready
    • Socket Timeouts—Number of Socket timeouts
    • Socket Disconnects—Number of Socket disconnects
    • Socket Reconnects—Number of Socket Reconnects
  • Client connection statistics, including:
    • Handshake Msg Sent—Count for number of handshakes sent from the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the Session Monitor server
    • Handshake Msg ACK—Count for number of handshakes acknowledged by the Communications Monitor server
    • Handshake Msg NAK—Count for number of handshakes not acknowledged by the Communications Monitor server
    • Keep Alive—Signal which keeps the connection between the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller and the Communications Monitor Server
    • SIP UDP Send Msg Sent—UDP Message sent from the SIP client to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller or the SIP server to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
    • SIP UDP Recv Msg Sent—UDP Message received sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to SIP client or the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP server
    • SIP TCP Send Msg Sent—TCP Message sent from SIP client to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller or the SIP server to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
    • SIP TCP Recv Msg Sent—TCP Message received sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP client or the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP server
    • SIP SCTP Send Msg Sent—SCTP Message sent from the SIP client to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller or the SIP server to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
    • SIP SCTP Recv Msg Sent—SCTP Message received sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP client or the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP server
    • ENUM Sent Msg Sent—ENUM Message sent from the SIP client to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller or the SIP server to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
    • ENUM Recv Msg Sent—ENUM Message received sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP client or the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP server

Arguments

by-client <client-IP>—Shows the same statistics as the command presents without arguments, but limits the output to the specified client.

errors—Display information on errors that may occur between the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller and the client.
  • Buffer Error—The number of errors occurring on the connection related to Oracle Communications Session Border Controller buffer space.
  • Socket Message Dropped—The number of messages traversing the specified socket that the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller has dropped.
  • Socket Disconnects—The number of times a connection between the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller and the client has been lost.
internal—Shows the same statistics as the command presents without arguments, but limits the output to statistics related to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller's perspective. Information displayed includes:
  • SIP UDP Send Msg Sent—UDP Message sent from the SIP client to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller or the SIP server to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • SIP UDP Recv Msg Sent—UDP Message received sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to SIP client or the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP server
  • SIP TCP Send Msg Sent—TCP Message sent from SIP client to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller or the SIP server to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • SIP TCP Recv Msg Sent—TCP Message received sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP client or the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP server
  • SIP SCTP Send Msg Sent—SCTP Message sent from the SIP client to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller or the SIP server to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • SIP SCTP Recv Msg Sent—SCTP Message received sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP client or the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP server
  • ENUM Sent Msg Sent—ENUM Message sent from the SIP client to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller or the SIP server to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • ENUM Recv Msg Sent—ENUM Message received sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP client or the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller to the SIP server

stats—Shows the same statistics as entering the command without an argument.

Example

ORACLE# show comm-monitor by-client 123.1.11.5

show configuration

Syntax

show configuration [to-file] [configuration-element]

This command entered without any arguments displays the current configuration. If you use any configuration element as an argument, this show command will display each instance of only the specified configuration element.

Arguments

<to-file> — Send all output from the show config command to a specified file located on the local flash file system instead of to the ACLI. This is an optional argument.

<configuration-element> — Specify the configuration element you want to view. This is an optional argument. If you do not specify a configuration element, the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller displays the entire configuration. The following is a list of valid configuration elements:

  • Values
    • account-config— Show account-config configuration
    • access-control—Show access-control configuration
    • audit-logging—Show the audit logging configurations
    • auth-params—Show the auth-params configurations
    • authentication—Show the authentication configuration
    • cert-status-profile—Show certificate status profile
    • call-recording-server—Show call-recording-server configurations
    • certificate-record—Show the certificate record configuration
    • class policy—Show all ClassPolicy configuration
    • data-flow—Show the data-flow configurations
    • dns-config—Show all dns-config configurations
    • dpd-params—Show the dpd-params configurations
    • enum-config—Show the enum-config configuration
    • ext-policy-server—Show the external-policy-server configuration
    • h323-config—Show h323 configuration
    • h323-stack—Show all h323-stack configurations
    • ike-certificate-profile—Show the ike-certificate-profile configurations
    • ike-config—Show the ike-config configuration
    • ike-interface—Show the ike-interface configurations
    • ike-sainfo—Show the ike-sainfo configurations
    • ims-aka-profile—Show the ims-aka-profile configurations
    • ipsec-global-config—Show the ipsec-global-config configurations
    • iwf-stack—Show iwf-stack configuration
    • host-route—Show all host-route configurations
    • local-address-pool—Show the local-address-pool configurations
    • local-policy—Show all local-policy configurations
    • local-response-map—Show sip-local-map configuration
    • login-config—Show the login configurations
    • media-profile—Show all media-profile configurations
    • media-manager—Show media-manager configuration
    • media-policy—Show all MediaPolicy configurations
    • network-interface—Show all network-interface configurations
    • network-parameters—Show all network-parameters configurations
    • ntp-config—Show ntp-config configuration
    • capture-receiver—Show capture-receiver configurations
    • phy-interface—Show all phys-interface configurations
    • public-key—Show the public-key configurations
    • realm-config—Show all realm configurations
    • q850-sip-map—Show q850-sip-map configurations
    • qos-constraints—Show the qos-constraints configurations
    • redundancy-config—Show redundancy-config configuration
    • sip-response-map—Show all response map configurations
    • rph-profile—Show rph-profile configurations
    • rph-policy—Show rph-policy configurations
    • session-agent—Show all session-agent configurations
    • session-group—Show all session-group configurations
    • session-translation—Show all session-translation configurations
    • session-router—Show session-router configuration
    • sip-config—Show all sip-config configurations
    • sip-feature—Show all sip-feature configurations
    • sip-interface—Show all sip-interface configurations
    • sip-manipulation—Show all of the sip-manipulation configurations
    • sip-nat—Show all sip-nat configurations
    • sip-profile—Show the sip-profile configurations
    • sip-isup-profile—Show the sip-isup-profile configurations
    • enforcement-profile—Show enforcement-profile configurations
    • sip-q850-map—Show sip-q850-map configuration
    • snmp-community—Show all snmp-community configurations
    • ssh-config—Show the SSH configurations
    • static-flow—Show all static-flow configurations
    • steering-pool—Show all steering-pool configurations
    • realm-group—Show realm-group configurations
    • surrogate-agent—Show all of the surrogate-agent configurations
    • system-config—Show system-config configuration
    • tls-profile—Show TLS profile configurations
    • translation-rules—Show all translation-rules configurations
    • trap-receiver—Show all TrapReceiver configurations
    • codec-policy—Show all codec-policy configurations
    • local-routing-config—Show all local-routing configurations
    • net-management-control—Show all net-management-control configurations
    • security-association—Show all security-association configurations
    • security-policy—Show all security-policy configurations
    • password-policy—Show password-policy configuration
    • session-constraints—Show all session-constraint configurations
    • system-access-list—Show all system-access-list configurations
    • tls-global—Show all tls-global configurations
    • inventory—Display an inventory of all configured elements on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller

Example

ORACLE# show configuration snmp-community

show directory

This command displays a list of file directories on the storage expansion module. Disk space on the Storage Expansion Module appears as a local volume on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Syntax

show directory <path>

Arguments

<path> Enter the absolute path of the file directory with a forward slash preceding the path name.

Mode

Superuser

Example

ORACLE# show directory /logs 

show dns

Sytnax

show dns < stats | cache-entry | lookup <arguments> | query <arguments> >

Arguments

stats
Show the statistics for the dns configuration. Your entries must follow the following formats:
  • NAPTR records—NAPTR:abc.com
  • SRV records—SRV:_sip._tcp.abc.com
  • A records—A:abc.com
cache-entry
Look in the DNS cache for a specific entry. Your entries must follow the following formats:
  • NAPTR records—NAPTR:abc.com
  • SRV records—SRV:_sip._tcp.abc.com
  • A records—A:abc.com
lookup
Perform a domain name services (DNS) query, first by an internal DNS cache lookup and then, if no results are found, perform an external DNS query from the command line. Subsequent arguments include:
  • realm— Realm name to use for DNS cache lookup key
  • type— Type of DNS query:
    • A for IPv4 lookup
    • AAAA for IPv6 lookup
    • SRV for service records, e.g. SRV_sip_tcp.abc.com
    • NAPTR for naming authority pointers, e.g. NAPTR.abc.com
  • name— Fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of DNS name to lookup
query
Perform a manual external Domain Name Services (DNS) query from the command line. Subsequent arguments include:
  • realm— Realm name to use for DNS cache lookup key
  • type— Type of DNS query:
    • A for IPv4 lookup
    • AAAA for IPv6 lookup
    • SRV for service records, e.g. SRV_sip_tcp.abc.com
    • NAPTR for naming authority pointers, e.g. NAPTR.abc.com
  • name— Fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of DNS name to lookup

Example

ORACLE# show dns stats 

show dnsalg rate

show dnsalg rate command

Displays the transaction rate of DNS ALG bound and sourced messages.

show entitlements

Use the show entitlements command to display all currently provisioned features and controlled features on the system. You can also use the setup entitlements command and type d to display the current features. The first time you execute the setup entitlements command, the system displays all provisioned features (excluding controlled features). You can edit the existing features, so long as you do not change the product type.

Syntax

show entitlements

Example 3-7 Show Entitlements Example

Provisioned Entitlements:
-------------------------
Session Border Controller Base    : enabled
Session Capacity                  : 32000
  Accounting                      : enabled
  IPv4 - IPv6 Interworking        : enabled
  IWF (SIP-H323)                  : enabled
  Load Balancing                  : enabled
  Policy Server                   : enabled
  Quality of Service              : enabled
  Routing                         : enabled
  SIPREC Session Recording        : enabled
Admin Security                    : 
ANSSI R226 Compliance             : 
IMS-AKA Endpoints                 : 750000
IPSec Trunking Sessions           : 1024
MSRP B2BUA Sessions               : 128000
SRTP Sessions                     : 128000
Transcode Codec AMR Capacity      : 100
Transcode Codec AMRWB Capacity    : 110
Transcode Codec EVRC Capacity     : 120
Transcode Codec EVRCB Capacity    : 130
Transcode Codec EVS Capacity      : 140
Transcode Codec OPUS Capacity     : 150
Transcode Codec SILK Capacity     : 160
TSCF Tunnels                      : 1024

Keyed (Licensed) Entitlements
-----------------------------
<CustomerName> License

MGCP
PAC
LI
TLS
Software TLS
H248
H248 SCF
H248 BGF
LI Debug
Session Replication for Recording
Transcode Codec AMR (uncapped AMR transcoding sessions)
Transcode Codec EVRC (uncapped EVRC transcoding sessions)
DoS
RTSP
Transcode Codec EVRCB (uncapped EVRCB transcoding sessions)
Software PCOM
Security Gateway
SIP Authorization/Authentication
Database Registrar (320000 contacts)
SLB (2000000 endpoints)
Software SRTP
Allow Unsigned SPL files
Diameter Director
Transcode Codec AMR-WB (uncapped AMRWB transcoding sessions)
CX
Transcode Codec Opus (uncapped OPUS transcoding sessions)
Transcode Codec SILK (uncapped SILK transcoding sessions)
Fraud Protection
GTP

show enum

Sytnax

show enum <arguments>

Displays ENUM statistics for your Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Arguments

Each valid enum argument is listed below:

  • all—Shows stats summary of all ENUM Agents
  • cache-entry—Look in the ENUM cache for a specific entry
  • h323d —Shows stats summary of all h323d ENUM Agents
  • lookup—Query an ENUM cache for a specific E.164 number
  • sipd —Shows stats summary of all sipd ENUM Agents
  • stats—Show the statistics for the ENUM configuration
  • status—Show the state of configured ENUM agents
  • rate—Displays the transaction rate of ENUM messages
The following information may be displayed for each output:
  • Enum Agent—Name of enum agents
  • Queries Total—Number of enum queries
  • Successful Total—Number of successful enum queries
  • Not Found Total—Number of enum queries returning not found
  • Timeout Total—Number of enum query timeouts

Example

ORACLE# show enum lookup

show ext-band-mgr

Sytnax

show ext-band-mgr

This command shows the external bandwidth manager / PDP/RACF statistics for the active, period, and lifetime monitoring spans. COPS message counts are shown for Recent and lifetime monitoring spans.

Example

ORACLE# show ext-band-mgr

show ext-clf-svr

Syntax

show ext-clf-svr

This command shows the CLF connection statistics for the active, period, and lifetime monitoring spans. CLF message counts are shown for Recent and lifetime monitoring spans.

Example

ORACLE# show ext-clf-svr 

show features

Syntax

show features

This command shows the currently enabled features based on added licenses.

Example

ORACLE# show features 

show h323d

Syntax

show h323d <arguments>

This command displays H.323 statistics for your Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Arguments

status—Display H.323 server status. The following statistics are displayed when this command is entered:
  • Incoming Calls—Number of incoming H.323 calls; displayed for period, lifetime, and active counts
  • Outgoing Calls—Number of outgoing H.323 calls; displayed for period, lifetime, and active counts
  • Connected Calls—Number of currently connected H.323 calls; displayed for period, lifetime, and active counts
  • Incoming Channels—Number of established incoming channels; displayed for period, lifetime, and active counts
  • Outgoing Channels—Number of established outgoing channels; displayed for period, lifetime, and active counts
  • Contexts—Number of established H.323 contexts; displayed for period, lifetime, and active counts
  • Queued Messages—Number of messages queued; displayed for current and lifetime durations
  • TPKT Channels—Number of TPKT channels open(ed); displayed for current and lifetime durations
  • UDP Channels—Number of UDP channels open(ed); displayed for current and lifetime durations

config—Display the H.323 configuration

stacklist—Display the configured H.323 stacks

stackconfig <stack name> —Display detailed H.323 stack information about the stack-name you specify.

agentlist—Display H323 session agents

grouplist—Display H.323 session agent groups

agentconfig—Display H.323 session agents configuration. This command shows detailed information about the session agent specified by its IP address in the <hostname> argument.

groupconfig—Display H.323 session agent group configuration

agentstats—Display H.323 session agent statistics. By typing show h323d agentstats <agent>, you can view activity for the H.323 session agent that you specify.

groupstats—Display session information for session agent groups

h323stats—Display H.323 stacks and statistics on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller. The display identifies the H.323 stack by its name and then provides the data for each H.323 stack. Adding a stackname h323d h323stats <stack-name> displays detailed statistics for the H.323 stack that you specify. This information is displayed according to the following categories: H.225, H.245, and RAS.

registrations—Display H.323 registration endpoints information

sessions all—Display all H.323 sessions currently on the system

sessions by-agent <agent name>—Display H.323 sessions for the session agent specified; adding iwf to the end of the command shows sessions for the IWF; adding detail to the end of the command expands the displayed information

sessions by-callid <call ID>—Display H.323 sessions for the call ID specified; adding iwf to the end of the command shows sessions for the IWF; adding detail to the end of the command expands the displayed information

sessions by-ip <endpoint IP address>—Display H.323 sessions for the specified IP address for an endpoint; adding iw to the end of the command shows sessions for the IWF; adding detail to the end of the command expands the displayed information

sessions by-user <calling or called number.—Display H.323 sessions for the specified user; adding iw to the end of the command shows sessions for the IWF; adding detail to the end of the command expands the displayed information

stack-alarms—Display a list of H.323 stacks that raised an alarm

stackCallstats—Show a summary of H.323 call statistics for all stacks

stackPvtstats—Show a summary of H.323 stack’s internal data structures

stackDisconnectInstats—Show a summary of H.323 pvt statistics for all stacks

tackDisconnectOutstats— Show Summary of H.323 pvt statistics for all stacks


Executing the show h323 command without any arguments will return the same output as using the status argument.

Example

ORACLE# show h323d status 

show health

Syntax

show health

In HA architectures, the show health command displays the following information:

  • Health score
  • Current Oracle Communications Session Border Controller HA state as active, standby, or out of service
  • If media flow information is synchronized for both supported protocols: SIP and H.323 (true/false). If media flow information is not available, Media Synchronized disabled will be displayed in the show health output.
  • If SIP signaling information is synchronized (true/false). If SIP signaling is not available, SIP Synchronized disabled will be displayed in the show health output.
  • If configuration information is synchronized (true/false). If configuration checkpointing is not available, Config Synchronized disabled will be displayed in the show health output.
  • IP address of the current HA Oracle Communications Session Border Controller’s active peer (no peer is denoted with an IP address of 0.0.0.0)
  • Last message received from the HA Oracle Communications Session Border Controller peer
  • A switchover log containing the last 20 switchover events

Example

ORACLE# show health

show imports

This command displays the list of sip-manipulation rules exported as files to the /code/imports directory.

Syntax

show imports

Mode

Superuser

Example

ORACLE# show imports 

show interface-mapping

Syntax

show interface-mapping

This command is deprecated. Equal functionality is provided using the interface-mapping branch's show command and the show interfaces mapping command.

show interfaces

Syntax

show interfaces [brief] [ethernet] [mapping]

The show interfaces command shows all information concerning the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller’s rear interfaces:

  • Flags (such as loopback, broadcast, promiscuous, ARP, running, and debug)
  • Type
  • Internet address
  • VLAN ID (if applicable)
  • Broadcast address (if applicable)
  • Netmask
  • Subnet mask (if applicable)
  • Gateway (if applicable)
  • Ethernet (MAC) address (if applicable)
  • Route metric
  • Maximum transfer unit size
  • Number of octets sent and received on this interface (if applicable)
  • Number of packets sent and received on this interface
  • Number of non-unicast packets sent and received on this interface (if applicable)
  • Number of unicast packets sent and received on this interface (if applicable)
  • Number of multicast packets sent and received on this interface (if applicable)
  • Number of input discards (if applicable)
  • Number of input unknown protocols (if applicable)
  • Number of input and output errors
  • Number of collisions
  • Number of drops

    This command also displays information for loopback interfaces.

Arguments

<brief> Allows you to view key running statistics about the operational interfaces within a single screen. This is an optional argument.

<ethernet> Allows you to view status information on all configurable interfaces within a single screen. This is an optional argument.

<mapping> Provides the same functionality as the interface-mapping branch's show command. This is an optional argument available only on VNF or COTS deployments.

Example

ORACLE# show interfaces

show ip

Syntax

show ip <arguments>

Displays IP statistics for the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Arguments

The following is a list of valid show ip arguments:
  • statistics —Display detailed IP statistics
  • connections —Display all TCP and UDP connections
  • sctp—Display all SCTP statistics, including a list of current connections per SCTP state and systemwide counts.
  • tcp —Display all TCP statistics, including a list of current connections per TCP state and differentiated by inbound, outbound, listen and IMS-AKA connections as well as systemwide counts.
  • udp —Display all UDP statistics

Executing the show ip command with no arguments returns the equivalent of the show ip statistics command.

show logfile

Syntax

show logfile [filename]

Display log files saved onto the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller. Entering this command without specifying a filename displays a complete list of log files.

Arguments

[filename] Specify the file whose logs you want to view. This is an optional argument.

Example

ORACLE# show logfile 

show loglevel

Syntax

show loglevel <task> [<type> | <verbose>] [filename]

This command displays loglevel statistics for your Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Arguments

<task> Enter the name of the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller task for which you are requesting information. By typing all, you are given an abbreviated display of all running processes.

<type> Select the log type whose level is to be displayed.

<verbose> Type verbose at the end of the show loglevel command to view a verbose display of either a specified task or all tasks. This is an optional argument.

[file-name] Enter the name of the specific logfile you want to view. This is an optional argument.

Example

ORACLE# show loglevel sipd verbose 

show lrt

Syntax

show lrt <route-entry | “stats”>

This command displays Local Routing Table (LRT) statistics on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Arguments

<route-entry> Display a specific entry in the LRT

<stats> Display all LRT statistics

Example

ORACLE# show lrt stats

show mbcd

Syntax

show mbcd <arguments>

The show mbcd command displays MBCD statistics for your Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Arguments

statistics —Display information related media flows established by the MBCD task. The following is a list of the MBCD statistics displayed when you enter this command:

The following counts are given for Period (high and total) and Lifetime (Total, period-max, High) windows. Currently Active counts are also displayed.
  • Client Sessions—Number of media sessions established by application clients of the MBCD task. Clients of MBCD include all signaling protocol tasks (SIP and H.323).
  • Client Trans—Number of MBCD transactions in the application clients to create, modify and remove flows
  • Contexts—Number of Contexts in the MBCD task. A Context represents the MBCD Server side of a media session. It contains all flows for the media session.
  • Flows—Number of unidirectional flows established in MBCD. This includes both static flows defined by the signaling configuration, and dynamic flows for media sessions.
  • Flow-Port—Number of "anchor" ports established by MBCD. MBCD maintains a mapping of the RTP steering port allocated for a flow so it can recognize flows that hairpin or spiral through the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller. This statistic reflects the number of entries in that table.
  • Flow-NAT—Number of entries in the MBCD table that maps CAM entry indexes to flows. An entry is added to this table when a NAT entry is added to the CAM for a flow.
  • Flow-RTCP—Number of special NAT table entries for RTCP. For Hosted NAT Traversal (HNT), the RTP and RTCP flows must be treated separately because the source port of the RTCP cannot be predicted.
  • Flow-Hairpin—Number of hairpined/spiraled flows recognized by MBCD. This occurs when the signaling originates in an access realm, goes into a backbone realm, and then back into the same access realm, or another access realm on the same network interface.
  • Flow-Released—Number of hairpined/spiraled flows released back into the original realm (when mm-in-realm or mm-in-network is disabled)
  • MSM-Release—Number of flows that have been released as part of the SIP distributed (multi-system) release feature
  • NAT Entries—Number of NAT table entries in the CAM established by MBCD for its flows. The NAT table can be viewed with the show nat commands.
  • Free Ports—Number of ports available from configured steering pools
  • Used Ports—Number of ports allocated to flows
  • Port Sorts—Number of times the free ports list had to be sorted because consecutive ports (for RTP & RTCP) could not be found
  • MBC Trans—Number of MBC transactions currently in progress
  • MBC Ignored—Number of requests ignored because it is in standby mode in an HA configuration
  • ARP Trans—Number of ARP Transactions. In some cases, MBCD must obtain the MAC address of the destination of a flow before an entry can be added to the NAT table. This statistic shows the number of outstanding ARP requests for MBCD flows.
  • Relatch NAT
  • Relatch RTCP
  • MSM-SRTP-Passthrough
  • SRTP Sessions
nat— Display statistics about MBCD's usage of the NAT Table and flow guard timer events. The following is a list of all MBCD NAT statistics:
  • Adds—Number of times an entry was added to the NAT table
  • Deletes—Number of times an entry was removed from the NAT table
  • Updates—Number of times a NAT table entry was updated, including updates due to the "latching" event when the first packet for a flow is received
  • Non-Starts—Number of initial flow guard timeouts (i.e. number of times a packet was never received for a NAT table entry)
  • Stops—Number of subsequent flow guard timeouts (i.e. number of times that packets stopped for a NAT table entry)
  • Timeouts—Number of total session limit timeouts (i.e. number of times the session limit for a flow was exceeded)
acls—Display MBCD Access Control statistics, starting with a time stamp showing when the current period began. The following is a list of each entry count:
  • The following ACL statistics are shown for the Period and Lifetime monitoring spans:
  • Static Trusted
  • Static Blocked
  • Dynamic Trusted
  • Dynamic Blocked

    The following ACL statistics are shown for the Lifetime monitoring span:

  • Add Requests
  • Added
  • Removed
  • Dropped
errors —Display MBCD task error statistics, starting with a time stamp showing when the current period began; statistics for client and server are included. The following is a list of MBCD error statistics displayed when you enter this command:
  • Client statistics count errors and events encountered by applications that use the MBCD to set up and tear down media sessions:
  • Client Errors—Number of errors in the client application related to MBC transactions that are otherwise uncategorized
  • Client IPC Errors—Number of errors in the client application related to the Inter-Process Communication
  • No Session (Open)—Number of MBC transactions creating or updating a media session that could not be sent to MBCD because the media session state information could not be located
  • No Session (Drop)—Number of MBC transactions deleting a media session that could not be sent to MBCD because the media session state information could not be located
  • Exp Flow Events—Number of flow timer expiration notifications received from the MBCD by all applications
  • Exp Flow Not Found—Number of flow timer expiration notifications received from the MBCD by all applications for which no media session or flow information was present in the application
  • Transaction Timeouts—Number of MBC transaction timeouts

    Server statistics count errors and events encountered by MBCD:

  • Server Errors—Number of uncategorized errors in the MBC server
  • Server IPC Errors—Number of errors on the server related to the IPC
  • Flow Add Failed—Number of errors encountered when attempting to add an entry to the NAT table
  • Flow Delete Failed—Number of errors encountered when attempting to remove an entry from the NAT table
  • Flow Update Failed—Number of errors encountered when attempting to update an entry in the NAT table upon receipt of the first packet for a media flow
  • Flow Latch Failed—Number of errors when attempting to locate an entry in the NAT table upon receipt of the first packet for a media flow
  • Pending Flow Expired—Number of flow timer expirations for pending flows that have not been added to the NAT table
  • ARP Wait Errors—Number of errors and timeouts related to obtaining the Layer 2 addressing information necessary for sending media
  • Exp CAM Not Found—Number that the NAT table entry for an expired flow could not find in the NAT table. This usually occurs due to a race condition between the removal of the NAT entry and the flow timer expiration notification being sent to MBCD.
  • Drop Unknown Exp Flow—Number of flows deleted by the MBCD because of a negative response from the application to a flow timer expiration notification
  • Unk Exp Flow Missing—Number of negative responses from the application to a flow timer expiration notification for which the designated flow could not be found in MBCD's tables
  • Exp Notify Failed—Number of errors encountered when the MBCD attempted to send a flow timer expiration notification to the application
  • Unacknowledged Notify—Number of flow expiration notification messages sent from MBCD to the application for which MBCD did not receive a response in a timely manner
  • No Ports Available—Number of steering port allocation requests not be satisfied due to a lack of free steering ports in the realm
  • Invalid Realm—Number of flow setup failures due to an unknown realm in the request from the application
  • Insufficient Bandwidth—Number of flow setup failures due to insufficient bandwidth in the ingress or egress realm
  • Open Streams Failed—Number of MBC transactions creating or updating a media session that could not be sent to the MBCD because the media session state information could not be located
  • Drop Streams Failed—Number of MBC transactions deleting a media session that could not be sent to MBCD because the media session state information could not be located
  • Drop/Exp Flow Missing—Number of negative responses from the application to a flow timer expiration notification for which the designated flow could not be found in MBCD’s tables
  • Stale Ports Reclaimed—For an HA node, this is the number of ports that were reclaimed when the standby had a stale flow that the active system replaced; when the flow is replaced, the steering ports are also reallocated properly (i.e., according to the active system)
  • Stale Flows Replaced—For an HA node, this is the number of times that the standby system had entries in its flow tables that did not match those on the active system; the active system replaced the standby’s stale flows with valid ones
  • Pipe Alloc Errors—For communication between the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller’s tasks (sipd, h323d, and algd) and middlebox control protocol tasks, this is the number of times that buffer allocation failed
  • Pipe Write Errors—For communication between the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller’s tasks (sipd, h323d, and algd) and middlebox control protocol tasks, this is the number of times that messages were not sent (possibly because of a pipe/buffer allocation error)
add—List statistics of mbcd transactions that include an Add command. Statistics are given for Recent, Total, and PerMax periods. The following is a list of MBCD add statistics displayed when you enter this command:
  • Add incoming statistics when an add message is received by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • Incoming requests received—Number of mbcd add commands received
  • Incoming replies sent—Number of responses sent in response to an mbcd add
  • Incoming errors sent—Number of errors sent in response to an mbcd add

    Add outgoing statistics when an mbcd add message is sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller:

  • Outgoing requests sent—Number of MBCD add commands sent from the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • Outgoing replies received—Number of responses received in response to a sent Add message
  • Outgoing errors received—Number of errors received in response to a sent Add message
modify —List statistics of mbcd transactions that include a modify command. The following is a list of MBCD modify statistics displayed when you enter this command:
  • Add incoming statistics when a modify message is received by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller:
  • Incoming requests received—Number of mbcd modify commands received
  • Incoming replies sent—Number of responses sent in response to an mbcd modify
  • Incoming errors sent—Number of errors sent in response to an mbcd modify

    Add outgoing statistics when an mbcd modify message is sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

  • Outgoing requests sent—Number of MBCD modify commands sent from the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • Outgoing replies received—Number of responses received in response to a sent modify message
  • Outgoing errors received—Number of errors received in response to a sent modify message
subtract—List statistics of mbcd transactions that include a subtract command. The following is a list of MBCD subtract statistics that are displayed when you enter this command:
  • Add incoming statistics when a subtract message is received by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller:
  • Incoming requests received—Number of mbcd subtract commands received
  • Incoming replies sent—Number of responses sent in response to an mbcd subtract
  • Incoming errors sent—Number of errors sent in response to an mbcd subtract

    Add outgoing statistics when an MBCD subtract message is sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller:

  • Outgoing requests sent—Number of MBCD subtract commands sent from the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • Outgoing replies received—Number of responses received in response to a sent subtract message
  • Outgoing errors received—Number of errors received in response to a sent subtract message
notify—List statistics of mbcd transactions that include a notify command. The following is a list of MBCD notify statistics that are displayed when you enter this command:
  • Add incoming statistics when a notify message is received by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller:
  • Incoming requests received—Number of mbcd notify commands received
  • Incoming replies sent—Number of responses sent in response to an mbcd notify
  • Incoming errors sent—Number of errors sent in response to an mbcd notify

    Add outgoing statistics when an mbcd notify message is sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller:

  • Outgoing requests sent—Number of MBCD notify commands sent from the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • Outgoing replies received—Number of responses received in response to a sent notify message
  • Outgoing errors received—Number of errors received in response to a sent notify message
other—List statistics of mbcd transactions related to non-compliant protocols used by specific customers. The following is a list of statistics displayed when you enter this command:
  • Add incoming statistics when a customer-specific message is received by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller:
  • Incoming requests received—Number of customer-specific mbcd commands received
  • Incoming replies sent—Number of responses sent in response to a customer-specific mbcd command
  • Incoming errors sent—Number of errors sent in response to a customer-specific mbcd command

    Add outgoing statistics when a customer-specific mbcd message is sent by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller:

  • Outgoing requests sent—Number of MBCD notify commands sent from the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • Outgoing replies received—Number of responses received in response to a customer-specific message
  • Outgoing errors received—Number of errors received in response to a sent customer-specific message
realms—Display steering ports and bandwidth usage for home, public, and private realms. The following is a list of statistics displayed when you enter this command:
  • Used—Number of steering ports used
  • Free—Number of free steering ports
  • No Ports—Number of times that a steering port could not be allocated
  • Flows—Number of established media flows
  • Ingress—Amount of bandwidth being used for inbound flows
  • Egress—Amount of bandwidth being used for outbound flows
  • Total—Maximum bandwidth set for this realm
  • Insuf BW—Number of times that a session was rejected due to insufficient bandwidth
realms <realm-name>—Display mbcd realm statistics for a given realm; given for period and lifetime durations. The following is a list of statistics displayed when you enter this command:
  • Ports Used—Number of ports used
  • Free Ports—Number of free ports
  • No Ports Avail—Number of times no steering ports were available
  • Ingress Band—Amount of bandwidth used for inbound flows
  • Egress Band—Amount of bandwidth used for outbound flows
  • BW Allocations—Number of times that bandwidth was allocated
  • Band Not Avail—Number of times a session was rejected due to insufficient bandwidth

redundancy —Display the equivalent of the show redundancy mbcd command

all —Display information related to many of the show mbcd subcommands. Only those MBC messages for which there are statistics are shown. Rather than entering the individual subcommands, all information is displayed for the following:
  • MBC status
  • NAT entries
  • MBC errors
  • MBC messages including: add, modify, subtract, notify, and other
stun—Display STUN server statistics
  • Servers—The number of STUN servers (the same as the number of realms configured with a STUN server).
  • Server Ports—Number of ports per STUN server; there will be four ports per STUN server.
  • Binding Requests—Number of STUN Binding Request messages received by all STUN servers.
  • Binding Responses—Number of STUN Binding Response messages sent by all STUN servers.
  • Binding Errors—Number of STUN Binding Error messages sent by all STUN servers.
  • Messages Dropped—Number of messages dropped by all STUN servers.

Example

ORACLE# show mbcd errors

show media

Syntax

show media <media-stats> <slot> <port> <vlan>

Arguments

<media-stats> The following is a list of admin state arguments:
  • classify —Display network processor statistics; requires slot and port arguments
  • host-stats —Display statistics for the host processor including number of packets received at a specific port and types of packets received; requires slot and port arguments
  • frame-stats —Display frame counts and drops along the host path; does not require port and slot specification
  • network — Display network interface details; does not require port and slot specification
  • physical —Display all phy-interface information; does not require port and slot specification
  • phy-stats —Display data/packets received on the front interface (media) ports; shows the physical level of front interface statistics according to slot and port numbers and is displayed according to received data/packets and transmitted data/packets; requires slot and port arguments
  • tm-stats—Show all of the traffic manager statistics and shows the results of the traffic policing due to NetSAFE configuration. This command is used only for debugging purposes. Do not execute this command unless instructed by Oracle Engineering or Support.
  • utilization—Show physical level utilization
<slot>— Select the media interface slot
  • Values 0 (left slot) | 1 (right slot)
<port> —Select the media interface port
  • Values 0 (leftmost) | 1 | 2 | 3 (rightmost)

<vlan> Enter the VLAN ID if required

Example

ORACLE# show media network 1 2 0

show memory

Syntax

show memory [memory-stats]

This command displays statistics related to the memory of your Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Arguments

[memory-stats] The following is a list of each memory statistic:
  • usage—Display system-wide memory usage statistics. If the show memory command is issued without any arguments, the equivalent of this argument is displayed.
  • application—Display application memory usage statistics
  • l2—Display layer 2 cache status
  • l3—Display layer 3 cache status
  • sobjects—Displays the number of sobject classes currently consuming system memory. Use this command only for debugging purposes under the direction of Oracle support.

show monthly-minutes

Syntax

show monthly-minutes <realm-id>

Display the monthly minutes for a specified realm.

Arguments

<realm-id> Enter the specific realm whose monthly minutes you want to view.

Example

ORACLE# show monthly-minutes realm1

show msrp statistics

show msrp statistics command.

Displays cumulative MSRP session counts.

Note:

If you reset the statistics while calls and sessions are in progress, the system does not keep the existing data or re-synchronize it with the reset. When the calls and sessions are completed, the statistics show negative values. Do not reset show-msrp-stats while calls and sessions are in progress.

show nat

Syntax

show nat <display-type>

Displays NAT statistics for a specified NAT time on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Arguments

<display-type> The following is a list of each method to display the nat table:
by-index —Display a specified range of entries in the NAT table, with a maximum of 5024 entries. The default range is 1 through 200. The range corresponds to line numbers in the table, and not to the number of the entry itself. The syntax for using the show nat by-index command is:
show nat by-index <starting entry> <ending entry>
in-tabular —Display a specified range of entries in the NAT table display in table form, maximum of 5024 entries. The syntax is modeled on the show nat by-index command:
show nat in-tabular <starting entry> <ending entry>
by-addr—Display NAT table information matching source and destination addresses. You must specify source address (SA) and/or destination address (DA) values. If no addresses are entered, the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller shows all of the table entries. NAT entries can be matched according to SA or DA or both.
show nat by-addr <source IPv4 address> <destination IPv4 address>

info—Display general NAT table information. The output is used for quick viewing of a Oracle Communications Session Border Controller’s overall NAT functions, including the maximum number of NAT table entries, the number of used NAT table entries, the length of the NAT table search key, the first searchable NAT table entry address, the length of the data entry, the first data entry address, and whether or not aging and policing are enabled in the NAT table.

flow-info—Display NAT table entry debug information. You must specify if you want to view NAT data for all entries or if you want to specify an address or a switch ID.
show nat flow-info [by-addr | srtp] 

Example

ACMEPACKET# show nat by-index

show neighbor-table

Syntax

show neighbor-table

The show neighbor-table command displays the IPv6 neighbor table and validates that there is an entry for the link local address, and the gateway uses that MAC address.

Example

ORACLE# show neighbor-table
LINK LEVEL NEIGHBOR TABLE
Neighbor                             Linklayer Address  Netif Expire    S Flags
300::100                             0:8:25:a1:ab:43      sp0 permanent ? R 871962224
400::100                             0:8:25:a1:ab:45      sp1 permanent ? R 871962516
fe80::bc02:a98f:f61e:20%sp0          be:2:ac:1e:0:20      sp0 4s        ? R 871962808
fe80::bc01:a98f:f61e:20%sp1          be:1:ac:1e:0:20      sp1 4s        ? R 871963100
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICMPv6 Neighbor Table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  entry: slot port vlan IP                             type       flag pendBlk Hit MAC
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  5    : 1    0    0    fe80::bc01:a98f:f61e:20/64     08-DYNAMIC 1    0       1   be:01:ac:1e:00:20
  4    : 1    0    0    0.0.0.0/64                     01-GATEWAY 0    0       1   be:01:ac:1e:00:20
  3    : 1    0    0    400::/64                       02-NETWORK 0    0       1   00:00:00:00:00:00
  2    : 0    0    0    fe80::bc02:a98f:f61e:20/64     08-DYNAMIC 1    0       1   be:02:ac:1e:00:20
  1    : 0    0    0    0.0.0.0/64                     01-GATEWAY 0    0       1   be:02:ac:1e:00:20
  0    : 0    0    0    300::/64                       02-NETWORK 0    0       1   00:00:00:00:00:00
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

show net-management-control

Syntax

show net-management-control [string | all]

This command displays network management control statistics on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Arguments

<string> —Enter a name for the net-management-control configuration whose statistics you want to view. This is an optional argument.

<all> Enter all to view statistics for all net-management-control entries. This is an optional argument.

Example

ORACLE# show net-management-control

show nsep-stats

Syntax

show nsep-stats [all | rvalue]

The show nsep-stats command displays information about inbound sessions and r-values.

Arguments

<all> Display information about inbound sessions and r-values for the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller’s NSEP support feature. This is an optional argument.

<rvalue> View statistics for a specific r-value. An r-value is a namespace and priority combination entered in the following format: namespace.priority. The display also shows the specified r-value for which it is displaying data. This is an optional argument.

Mode

User, Superuser

show ntp

Syntax

show ntp <arguments>

The show ntp command displays information about NTP servers configured for use with the system

Arguments

servers—Display information about the quality of the time being used in terms of offset and delay measurement; maximum error bounds are also displayed.

status—Display information about configuration status, NTP daemon synchronization, NTP synchronizations in process, if NTP is down.

Mode

User, Superuser

Example

ORACLE# show ntp servers

show packet-trace

Syntax

show packet-trace

The show packet-trace command displays active, REMOTE traces. The command also allows you to check whether the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller’s tracing status is currently enabled or disabled.

Mode

Superuser

Example

ORACLE# show packet-trace

show platform

Syntax

show platform [all | cpu | cpu-load | errors | heap-statistics | kernel-drivers | limits | memory | paths | pci components]

The show platform command is useful for distinguishing various hardware and software configurations for the current version of software from other hardware platform on which this software may run.

Arguments

  • all—Display full platform information
  • cpu—Display summary CPU information
  • cpu-load—Displays percent CPU consumed on each core during the last 10 second window using calculations similar to the linux top command.
  • errors—Display Servicepipe write errors
  • heap-statistics—Display total in-use memory for small and large allocations based upon TCMalloc's class and classless sizes.
  • kernel-drivers—Display included kernel drivers
  • limits—Display platform related limits
  • memory—Display current memory usage
  • paths—Display filesystem paths
  • pci—Display relevant pci bus information
  • components—Display the specific versions of the OS packages

Note:

No argument concatenates all arguments.

show platform limits

This command displays the current limits for a variety of operating capacities. The output of show platform limits is based on the platform this command is executed from and the software version running. The command has no arguments.

Syntax

Sample output is displayed below.

ORACLE# show platform limits               
Maximum number of sessions:3000               
Maximum number of ACLS: 60000 
Maximum number of common PAC buffers: 8000       
Maximum number of kernel-rules: 216256                     
Maximum CPS rate: 300    
Maximum number of TCP Connections: 60000        
Maximum number of TLS Connections: 10     
Maximum number of packet buffers: 30000               
Maximum Signaling rate: 4000     
Maximum number of session agents: 125        
Maximum number of System ACLs: 256              
Maximum number of VLANs: 4096                   
Maximum number of ARPs: 4104        
Maximum number of INTFC Flows: 4096 
Maximum number of Static Trusted Entries: 8192      
Maximum number of Untrusted Entries: 4096          
Maximum number of Media Entries: 6000           
Maximum number of Deny Entries: 8192     
Maximum number of Internal Flows: 32   
Maximum number of Sip Rec Sessions: 512     
Maximum number of RFC 2833 Flows: 6000      
Maximum number of SRTP Sessions: 500       
Maximum number of QoS Sessions: 3000    
Maximum number of Xcoded Sessions: 100          
Maximum number of HMU Flows: 6000 
Maximum number of Transport Sessions: 0      
Maximum number of MSRP Sessions: 0        
Maximum number of SLB Tunnels: 0      
Maximum number of SLB Endpoints: 0          
Maximum number of IPSec SAs: 0            
Maximum Licensed Capacity: 256000

show policy-server

The show policy-server command allows you to view specific information about a supplied policy server object.

Syntax

show policy-server [[standby | <Name|AgentName> | <IP_Address:Port>] [<DiamMsg>]] | [connections]

Arguments

Name — Accepts the FQDN of the policy server for which you want to show information. Also accepts policy-groups name, providing cumulative statistics. Specifying a policy-agent name after the policy-group name displays statistics specific to that agent.

IP_Address:Port — identifies the IP address of the policy server and the specific port for which you want to show information. This is useful when an Rx server has multiple connections to multiple external servers.

DiamMsg — identifies a specific Diameter message for which you want to show information. The accepted diameter messages are:
  • AAR — Authorization-Authentication Request
  • ASR — Abort-Session-Request
  • CER — Capabilities-Exchange-Request
  • DWR — Device-Watchdog-Request. The display table for DWR has two sections: DWR Sent and DWR Received.
  • RAR — Re-Authorization-Request
  • STR — Session-Termination-Request

connections — displays a table listing the active TCP connections; that is, it identifies the local and remote IP addresses and ports, and the socket state for the policy server. The command also displays multihoming connections and socket stated for agents configured for SCTP.

show power

The show power command allows you to view Oracle Communications Session Border Controller power supply information including the state of the power supply and the installation position.

Example

ORACLE# show power

show privilege

Syntax

show privilege

Displays the current level of privilege on which the user is operating:

  • Privilege level 0 refers to Level 0: User Mode
  • Privilege level 1 refers to Level 1: Superuser Mode

Example

ORACLE# show privilege 

show processes

Syntax

show processes <process>

The show processes command, executed without arguments, displays statistics for all active processes. The following task information is displayed: names of tasks, entries, task identification codes, task priorities, status, program counter, error numbers, and protector domain (PD) identification.

Arguments

<process> The following is a list of each process argument:
  • sysmand—Display sysmand process statistics related to the system’s startup tasks
  • acliSSH0— Show acliSSH0 process statistics
  • acliSSH1—Show acliSSH1 process statistics
  • acliSSH2—Show acliSSH2 process statistics
  • acliSSH3— Show acliSSH3 process statistics
  • acliSSH4— Show acliSSH4 process statistics
  • acliTelnet0— Show acliTelnet0 process statistics
  • acliTelnet1— Show acliTelnet1 process statistics
  • acliTelnet2— Show acliTelnet2 process statistics
  • acliTelnet3— Show acliTelnet3 process statistics
  • acliTelnet4— Show acliTelnet4 process statistics
  • ebmd— Show embd process statistics
  • h323d— Show h323d process statistics
  • lid— Show lid process statistics
  • snmpd— Show snmpd process statistics
  • cliworker— Show CliWorker process statistics
  • berpd—Display statistics for the border element redundancy protocol tasks; only accessible if your system is operating in an HA node
  • lemd—Display lemd process statistics
  • brokerd—Display brokerd process statistics
  • mbcd—Display mbcd process statistics related to the middlebox control daemon
  • radd—Display radd process statistics related to RADIUS; only accessible if your Oracle Communications Session Border Controller is using RADIUS
  • algd—Display algd process statistics
  • sipd—Display sipd process statistics
  • acliConsole—Display acliConsole process statistics
current—Show the date and time that the current monitoring period began and statistics for the current application process events. The following fields explain the output of the show processes current command:
  • Svcs—Number of times the process performs actions for different services (e.g., sockets, timeout queues, etc.)
  • TOQ—Number of active timers (in the Timed Objects) placed in the timeout queue
  • Ops—Number of times the process was prompted (or polled) to perform an action
  • Rcvd—Number of messages received by the process
  • Sent—Number of messages sent by the process
  • Events—Number of times a TOQ entry timed out
  • Alrm—Number of alarms the process sent
  • Slog—Number of times the process wrote to the system log
  • Plog—Number of times the process wrote to the process log
  • CPU—Average CPU usage over the last minute
  • Now—CPU usage for the last second
total —Display the total statistics for all of the application processes applicable to your Oracle Communications Session Border Controller. The following fields explain the output of the show processes total command:
  • Svcs—Number of times the process performed actions for different services (e.g., sockets, timeout queues, etc.)
  • Rcvd—Number of messages received by the process
  • Sent—Number of messages sent by the process
  • Events—Number of times a TOQ entry timed out
  • Alarm—Number of alarms the process sent
  • Slog—Number of times the process wrote to the system log
  • Plog—Number of times the process wrote to the process log
  • CPU—Average CPU usage since last reboot
  • Max—Maximum percentage of CPU usage in a 60 second period

collect—Show collector process statistics

CPU —Display information about the CPU usage for your Oracle Communications Session Border Controller, categorized on a per task/process basis. The following fields explain the output of the show processes cpu command:
  • Task Name—Name of the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller task or process
  • Task Id—Identification number for the task or process
  • Pri—Priority for the CPU usage
  • Status—Status of the CPU usage
  • Total CPU—Total CPU usage since last reboot in hours, minutes, and seconds
  • Avg—Displays percentage of CPU usage since the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller was last rebooted
  • Now—CPU usage in the last second

all — concatenate the show process command for all running prcoesses

memory—Show memory process statistics

top—The show processes top command displays realtime updates of per-process CPU utilization.

Example

ORACLE# show processes sysmand

show prom-info

Syntax

show prom-info <devices>

The show prom-info command displays hard-coded information about Oracle Communications Session Border Controller PROM information. The valid arguments which you enter in the show prom-info command depend on the current platform.

The show prom-info command is most immediately used to obtain device part numbers and revisions.

Arguments

<devices> The following is a list of available prom-info devices to query:

Acme Packet 6100/6400

  • CPU— CPU PROM information
  • MGMT—management interface card PROM information
  • PHY0— NIU card PROM information
  • POWER—power supply PROM information
  • SEC0—security module PROM information
  • TCU1-DIMM— lists the populated DSP DIMMs on a TCU card and their PROM information
  • all—Show all available PROM information
  • mainboard—Display mainboard PROM information
Acme Packet 6300/6350
  • CPU— CPU PROM information
  • FLEX1—riser card between mainboard and NIU in slot 1 PROM information
  • FLEX2—riser card between mainboard and NIU in slot 2 PROM information
  • MGMT— management interface card PROM information
  • PHY0—NIU card 0 (bottom) PROM information
  • PHY1—NIU card 1 (middle) PROM information
  • PHY2— NIU card 2 (top) PROM information
  • POWER— power supply PROM information
  • SEC1—security module 1 PROM information
  • SEC2—security module 2 PROM information
  • TCU1-DIMM— lists the populated DSP DIMMs on the TCU 1 card and the modules' PROM information
  • TCU2-DIMM— lists the populated DSP DIMMs on the TCU 2 card and the modules' PROM information
  • all—Show all available PROM information
  • mainboard—Display mainboard PROM information

Example

ORACLE# show prom-info mainboard 

show queues

Syntax

show queues [SIPD [commands <by-id <#>] | atcpd | CCD | DNS | FPE | LBP | LDAP | LRT | MBCD ]

The show queues command displays thread level CPU usage information for the specified protocol threads. Use this command only for debugging purposes under the direction of Oracle support.

show radius

Syntax

show radius <radius-stats>

This command displays RADIUS statistics.

Arguments

authentication—Show the authentication statistics

all—Show accounting, authentication, and CDR statistics on all RADIUS servers

cdr—Display all CDR statistics

accounting—Display the status of established RADIUS accounting connections. This argument has its own argument: <ALL | IPPORT>, where ALL returns accounting statistics for all RADIUS servers and IPPORT identifies the specific IP address and port of the accounting server for which you want to show information, in the form IP_Address:port. If you attempt to execute this argument for a Diameter accounting server, the command will be blocked with the message
Accounting configured for DIAMETER.  Please use "show accounting".
A successful RADIUS connection is displayed as READY, and an unsuccessful connection is displayed as DISABLED.
 The command’s output is divided into three sections:
  1. Client Display—Display general accounting setup (as established in the account-config element); includes the following information:
    • state of the RADIUS client
    • accounting strategy
    • IP address and port on which the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller's server is listening
    • maximum message delay in seconds
    • number of configured accounting servers
  2. Waiting Queue—Display the number of accounting (RADIUS) messages waiting to be sent that are queued on the client side
  3. <IP Address:Port>—IP Address and port headings indicated will be per the referenced RADIUS server active on the IP Address and port shown; also includes information about the accounting server’s state

Example

ORACLE# show radius authentication

show ramdrv

Displays RAMdrive usage, including the log cleaner threshold values and the size of the most recently saved configuration.

Example

ORACLE# show ramdrv

show realm

Syntax

show realm <realm-id>

Arguments

<realm-id> Specify the realm-id whose realm-specific data you want to view; includes QoS routing data for internal and external transactions

Example

ORACLE# show realm realm1

show rec

Syntax

show rec [redundancy]

Shows statistics for Recording Agent for SIP REC. You may add the redundancy argument to show SIPREC redundancy statistics.

show redundancy

Syntax

show redundancy <taskname> [actions] | [objects] | [journals [size [by-id <id#>] | [perf [by-id <id#>] 

The show redundancy command displays HA statistics for a redundant Oracle Communications Session Border Controller (OCSBC).

Arguments

<taskname> The following is a list of redundancy taskname arguments. A taskname is required, and output varies based on taskname:

  • mbcd— Display the synchronization of media flows for the members of an HA OCSBC pair.
  • algd—Display the synchronization of signaling for the members of an HA OCSBC pair
  • sipd—Display the synchronization of SIP signaling for the members of an HA OCSBC pair
  • config—Display the synchronization of configuration information for the members of an HA OCSBC pair
  • collect—Display the Collect redundancy statistics
  • rec—Display the SIPREC redundancy statistics
  • radius-cdr—Display the number of CDRs that have been synchronized from active to standby when the local CDR storage is enabled
  • iked—Display IKE redundancy statistics
  • manuald—Display manual redundancy statistics
  • rotated-cdr—Display statistics for rotated CDRs on the OCSBC.
The following HA statistics definitions apply to the applicable command output for Period and Lifetime monitoring spans.
  • Queued entries—Number of transactions not yet sent to standby OCSBC peer.
  • Red Records—Total number of HA transactions created
  • Records Dropped—Number of HA transaction records lost because the standby OCSBC fell behind in synchronization
  • Server Trans—Number of HA transactions in which the OCSBC acted was the server
  • Client Trans—Number of HA transactions where the OCSBC was the client

    The following HA transaction statistics are shown for the Lifetime monitoring span.

  • Requests received—Number of HA requests received by the OCSBC, acting as server
  • Duplicate requests—Number of situations in which an HA request was received by the OCSBC, and (acting as the server side in the client-server relationship) the OCSBC responded to it, but the client system did not receive the response in time and retransmitted its original request
  • Success responses—Number of HA requests that were received followed by a successful response to the client
  • Error responses—Number of HA requests that were received followed by a error response to the client
  • Request sent—Number of HA requests that were sent by the standby OCSBC
  • Retransmission sent—Number of times an HA request was retransmitted after no response
  • Success received—Number of HA requests receiving a reply from the other OCSBC in an HA pair
  • Errors received—Number of errors received in response to HA requests
  • Transaction timeouts—Number of HA transactions that timed out
  • Avg Latency—Calculation based on the Transaction Latency Request-Response RTTs
  • Max Latency—The maximum lifetime latency experienced by the current standby
  • Last redundant transaction processed—The numerical identifier of the last redundant transaction processed.
  • Request-Response Loss—Number of recent and lifetime transactions lost
  • Transaction Latency Request-Response RTTs—Request-Response round-trip-time (RTT) values, displayed as the number of times the RTT time result fell into the following ranges:
    • 0 ns – 2 ms
    • 2 – 4 ms
    • 4 – 8 ms
    • 8 – 16 ms
    • 16 – 33 ms
    • 33 - 67 ms
    • > 67 ms
Output to subsequent arguments vary based on the taskname specified. If the argument does not apply to the taskname, the system displays command not found. These arguments include:
  • actions—Shows flow add, delete and modify counters.
  • objects—Shows statistics on the sipd objects supported by redundancy. The system collects these statistics on both the active and standby OCSBC, and are never reset.
  • journals—shows per-task journal size and performance tables. Subsequent arguments specify the desired table, and can limit the output to a specific journal:
    • size— Shows the journal number, journal state, journal size and journal drops for each journal.

      Journal states include:

      • Resyn—Resynchronizing
      • Sync—Synchronizing
      • Sced— Synchronized

      To execute for a single journal, include the by-id <number> argument after the size argument, where <number> is the journal number. Journal numbering is 0-based.

    • perf— Shows the journal number, journal latency (recent period average, number of samples used for average calculation and maximum latency), journal queue rates (enqueue rate and dequeue rate) and journal overflows (i.e. full) on 1 line for each journal.

      To execute for a single journal, include the by-id <number> argument after the size argument, where <number> is the journal number. Journal numbering is 0-based.

Note:

Journal statistics only have meaning on the active OCSBC; initially, these values are 0 on a standby OCSBC. For debugging purpose, however, the system does not reset these statistics during a switchover. You can reset these counters using the reset redundancy command.

Example

ORACLE# show redundancy sipd 

show registration

Syntax

show registration <protocol> <by-ip | by-user> <ip-address | by-endpoint> | <statistics> | surrogate-agent <realm-id> | <unregistered>

To expand the capabilities of the show registration command, enter either by-user or by-ip after the protocol argument.

Arguments

<protocol> Select the protocol whose registration you want to view
  • sipd
  • h323

by-user <user> — Show registration information for a specific IP address of an endpoint, or a wildcard IP address value with an asterisk (*) at the end.

by-realm <realm> — Display information for calls that have registered through a specified ingress realm whose registration cache information you want to view. The realm value can be a wildcard.

by-registrar <registrar> — Display information for calls that use a specific registrar. Add the IP address of the registrar whose registration cache information you want to view. This value can be wildcarded.

by-route <IP address> — Display information for calls by their IP address which is able to be routed. This allows you to view the endpoints associated with public addresses. Enter the IP address whose registration cache information you want to view. This value can be wildcard.

by-endpoint <IP address> — Show registration information for a specific phone number or username. Provide the IP address of an endpoint, or a wildcard IP address value with an asterisk (*) at the end. This command is only available if you configure the reg-via-key parameter in the SIP interface configuration prior to endpoint registration. The reg-via-key parameter keys all registered endpoints by IP address and username.

Surrogate Agent — Displays all surrogate agents and their state including the last time of registration for each agent. The <unregistered> option displays all unregistered surrogate agents.

Phone number or username— Full phone number or username, or a wildcard number/username with an asterisk (*) . The display shows statistics for the Period and Lifetime monitoring spans.

  • User Entries—The number of unique SIP Addresses of Record in the cache
  • Local Contacts—The number of contact entries in the cache
  • Free Map Ports—The number of ports available in the free signaling port pool
  • Used Map Ports—The number of signaling ports allocated for registration cache entries
  • Forwards—Number of registration requests forwarded to the real registrar
  • Refreshes—Number of registrations the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller answered without having to forward registrations to the real registrar
  • Rejects—Number of unsuccessful registrations sent to real registrar
  • Timeouts—Number of times a refresh from the HNT endpoint was not received before the timeout
  • Fwd Postponed—The number of times sipd responded out of the cache instead of forwarding to the registrar due to the max-register-forward threshold
  • Fwd Rejected—The number of REGISTER 503s done after checking for a cached entry
  • Refr Extension—The number of times the max-register-refresh threshold was exceeded. The "Active" and "High" show the number of seconds added to the expiration
  • Refresh Extended—The number of times the expire time in a REGISTER response was extended due to the max-register-refresh threshold
  • Surrogate Regs— The total number of surrogate registers
  • Surrogate Sent— The total number of surrogate registers sent
  • Surrogate Reject—The total number of surrogate register rejects
  • Surrogate Timeout— The total number of surrogate register timeouts

statistics— Display a table of counters showing the total and periodic number of registrations, by protocol.

Example

ORACLE# show registration sipd by user*

show route-stats

Syntax

show route-stats

The show route-stats command shows routing statistics including bad routing redirects, dynamically created routes, new gateway due to redirects, destinations found unreachable, and use of a wildcard route.

Example

ORACLE# show route-stats

show routes

Syntax

show routes

The show routes command displays the current system routing table. This table displays the following information:

  • destination
  • netmask
  • TOS
  • gateway
  • flags
  • reference count
  • use
  • interface
  • protocol information

Example

ORACLE# show routes 

show running-config

Syntax

show running-config <to-file> | <configuration-element> <element key field>

The show running-config entered without any arguments displays the running configuration information in use on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller. If you use any configuration element key field as an argument, this show command will display only that specified configuration element.

Arguments

<to-file> — Send all output from the show config command to a specified file located on the local flash file system instead of to the ACLI. This is an optional argument.

<configuration-element> — Specify the configuration element you want to view. This is an optional argument. If you do not specify a configuration element, the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller displays the entire configuration.

Example

ORACLE# show running-config host-route 

show sa

Syntax

show sa

or

show sa stats

This command displays the security associations information for IMS-AKA. The srtp option is not available for the ETC NIU.

Example

ORACLE# show sa stats 

show security

Syntax

show security <argument>

This command displays configured security information on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller

Arguments

certificates <argument> — Show certificate information on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.
  • brief—Display a brief certificate description
  • detail—Display a detailed certificate description
  • pem—Display certificate information in Privacy Enhanced Mail (PEM) form
ike <arguments> — Displays statistics for IKE transactions
  • data-flow—Display data-flow information for IKE2
  • local-address-pool <pool ID | brief> —Display local address pool information for IKE2
    • pool ID—Display a specific local address pool in detail
    • brief—Display all local address pools briefly
ipsec <arguments> — Show IPSEC related information on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller. You can specify the name of the network interface whose IPSEC information you want to view.
  • sad—Display IPSEC SAD information
  • spd—Display IPSEC SDP information
  • statistics—Display IPSEC statistics
  • status—Display the interface IPSEC status
srtp <arguments> — Show SRTP related information.
  • sad—security-association database entries (Only the brief option is valid for ETC NIU)
  • sessions—number of active SRTP sessions (not valid for ETC NIU)
  • spd—security-policy database entries
  • statistics—interface and SA entry statistics (not valid for ETC NIU)
  • status—display interface IPSEC status (not valid for ETC NIU)
  • check-mini-cert <sipuraProfileName>—reads the XML file corresponding to the given sipura profile from /code/sipura/ directory of the SBC, then parses and checks the validity of the Sipura mini-certificate present in the file by verifying the signature and the expiration date of the certificate. It outputs if the mini-certificate is verified successfully or not
  • display-mini-cert <sipuraProfileName>—reads the file corresponding to the given sipura profile from /code/sipura directory of the SBC, then parses the file and decodes the base-64 encoded information. It outputs the information present in the mini-certificate in text format. This includes the user name, user ID, expiration date, public key and the signature.
  • update-mini-cert <sipuraProfileName>—If a user wishes to change the content of a certificate file (thus the minicertificate and keys) and would like the SBC to use this updated certificate and keys during call setup, then the user can accomplish this by first changing the content of the file and then executing this ACLI command specifying the Sipura profile that uses this file. This command when executed will attempt to read the file that is configured in the given Sipura profile and then will parse the file and update the minicertificate and keys that is used for this sipura profile. This command assumes that the file is present in /code/sipura directory and the user has not changed the file name configured in the Sipura profile.

ssm-accelerator — Display the SSM status on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller

tls <argument> Display TLS related information
  • session-cache—Display TLS session cache information
ssh-pub-key <arguments> — Displays public key record information including login name, fingerprint, fingerprint raw, comment (detailed view only), and public key (detail view only).
  • brief—View a brief display.
  • detail—View a detailed display.

Example

ORACLE# show security ipsec spd m10

show sessions

Syntax

show sessions

Displays session capacity for license and session use.

Total session capacity of the system list listed from this command.

The following statistics are available in a table for Period and Lifetime monitoring spans:
  • Total Sessions—The aggregation of all current active subscriber sessions (H.323 call/SIP session) and is the total session count against the capacity license.
  • SIP Sessions—The total current active SIP sessions
  • H.323 Calls—The total current active H.323 calls
  • Established Tunnels—
  • H.248 ALG Contexts— not used
The IWF Statistics are shown for the Period and Lifetime monitoring spans.
  • H.323 to SIP Calls—The calls that come in H.323 and go out SIP. These calls are included in “H.323 Calls” in the Session Statistics.
  • SIP to H.323 Calls—The calls that come in SIP and go out H.323. These calls are included in “SIP Sessions” in the Session Statistics.

SIP Statistics including Audio, and video call counts are shown for the Period and Lifetime monitoring spans.

Session-based Messaging Session counts are shown for the Period and Lifetime monitoring spans.

show sfps

Syntax

show sfps

The show sfps command displays the EEPROM contents of the SFP modules in the system (Small Form-Factor Pluggable (optical transceiver module)).

show sipd

Syntax

show sipd <arguments>

The show sipd command displays SIP statistics on your Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.

Arguments

status—Display information about SIP transactions. These statistics are given for the Period and Lifetime monitoring spans. This display also provides statistics related to SIP media events. The following statistics are displayed when using the show sipd status command.
  • Dialogs—Number of end-to-end SIP signaling connections
  • CallID Map—Total number of successful session header Call ID mappings
  • Sessions—Number of sessions established by an INVITE
  • Subscriptions—Number of sessions established by SUBSCRIPTION
  • Rejections—Number of rejected INVITEs
  • ReINVITEs—Number of ReINVITEs
  • Media Sessions—Number of successful media sessions
  • Media Pending—Number of media sessions waiting to be established
  • Client Trans—Number of client transactions
  • Server Trans—Number of server transactions that have taken place on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • Resp Contexts—Number of current response contexts
  • Saved Contexts—Total number of saved contexts
  • Sockets—Number of active SIP sockets
  • Req Dropped—Number of requests dropped
  • DNS Trans—Number of DNS transactions
  • DNS Sockets—Number of DNS Sockets
  • DNS Results—Number of dns results
  • Session Rate—The rate, per second, of SIP invites allowed to or from the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller during the sliding window period. The rate is computed every 10 seconds
  • Load Rate—Average Central Processing Unit (CPU) utilization of the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller during the current window. The average is computed every 10 seconds. When you configure the load-limit in the SIPConfig record, the system computes the average every 5 seconds
errors —Display statistics for SIP media event errors. These statistics are errors encountered by the SIP application in processing SIP media sessions, dialogs, and session descriptions (SDP). Errors are only displayed for the lifetime monitoring span.
  • SDP Offer Errors—Number of errors encountered in setting up the media session for a session description in a SIP request or response which is an SDP Offer in the Offer/Answer model (RFC 3264)
  • SDP Answer Errors—Number of errors encountered in setting up the media session for a session description in a SIP request or response which is an SDP Answer in the Offer/Answer model (RFC 3264)
  • Drop Media Errors—Number of errors encountered in tearing down the media for a dialog or session that is being terminated due to: a) non-successful response to an INVITE transaction; or b) a BYE transaction received from one of the participants in a dialog or session; or c) a BYE initiated by the system due to a timeout notification from MBCD
  • Transaction Errors—Number of errors in continuing the processing of the SIP client transaction associated with setting up or tearing down of the media session
  • Missing Dialog—Number of requests received by the SIP application for which a matching dialog count not be found
  • Application Errors—Number of miscellaneous errors in the SIP application that are otherwise uncategorized
  • Media Exp Events—Flow timer expiration notifications received from MBCD
  • Early Media Exps—Flow timer expiration notifications received for media sessions that have not been completely set up due to an incomplete or pending INVITE transaction
  • Exp Media Drops—Number of flow timer expiration notifications from the MBCD that resulted in the termination of the dialog/session by the SIP application
  • Multiple OK Drops—Number of dialogs terminated upon reception of a 200 OK response from multiple UASs for a given INVITE transaction that was forked by a downstream proxy
  • Multiple OK Terms—Number of dialogs terminated upon reception of a 200 OK response that conflicts with an existing established dialog on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • Media Failure Drops—Number of dialogs terminated due to a failure in establishing the media session
  • Non-ACK 2xx Drops—Number of sessions terminated because an ACK was not received for a 2xx response
  • Invalid Requests—Number of invalid requests; an unsupported header for example
  • Invalid Responses—Number of invalid responses; no Via header for example
  • Invalid Messages—Number of messages dropped due to parse failure
  • CAC Session Drop—Number of call admission control session setup failures due to user session count exceeded
  • Expired Sessions—Number of sessions terminated due to the session timer expiring
  • CAC BW Drop—Number of call admission control session setup failures due to insufficient bandwidth

    Lifetime displays show information for recent, total, and period maximum error statistics:

  • Recent—Number of errors occurring in the number of seconds listed after the time stamp
  • Total—Number of errors occurring since last reboot
  • PerMax—Identifies the highest individual Period Total over the lifetime of the monitoring
policy—Display SIP local policy / routing statistics for lifetime duration
  • Local Policy Lookups—Number of Local policy lookups
  • Local Policy Hits—Number of successful local policy lookups
  • Local Policy Misses—Number of local policy lookup failures
  • Local Policy Drops—Number of local policy lookups where the next hop session agent group is H323
  • Agent Group Hits—Number of successful local policy lookups for session agent groups
  • Agent Group Misses—Number of successful local policy lookups where no session agent was available for session agent group
  • No Routes Found—Number of successful local policy lookups but temporarily unable to route; session agent out of service for instance
  • Missing Dialog—Number of local policy lookups where the dialog is not found for a request addressed to the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller with a To tag or for a NOTIFY-SUBSCRIBE sip request
  • Inb SA Constraints—Number of successful local policy lookups where inbound session agent exceeded constraints
  • Outb SA Constraints—Number of successful outbound local policy lookups where session agent exceeded constraints
  • Inb Reg SA Constraints—Number of successful inbound local policy lookups where registrar exceeded constraints
  • Out Reg SA Constraints—Number of successful outbound local policy lookups where registrar exceeded constraints
  • Requests Challenged—Number of requests challenged
  • Challenge Found— Number of challenges found
  • Challenge Not Found—Number of challenges not found
  • Challenge Dropped—Number of challenges dropped
server—Display statistics for SIP server events when the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller acts as a SIP server in its B2BUA role. Period and Lifetime monitoring spans for SIP server transactions are provided.
  • All States—Number of all server transactions
  • Initial—Number of times the “initial” state was entered after a request was received
  • Queued—Number of times the “queued” state is entered because resources are temporarily unavailable
  • Trying—Number of times the “trying” state was entered due to the receipt of a request
  • Proceeding—Number of times a server transaction has been constructed for a request
  • Cancelled—Number of INVITE transactions that received a CANCEL
  • Established—Number of times the server sent a 2xx response to an INVITE
  • Completed—Number of times the server received a 300 to 699 status code and entered the “completed” state
  • Confirmed—Number of times that an ACK was received while the server was in “completed” state and transitioned to “confirmed” state
  • Terminated—Number of times that the server received a 2xx response or never received an ACK in the “completed” state, and transitioned to the “terminated” state
client —Display statistics for SIP client events when the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller is acting as a SIP client in its B2BUA role. Period and Lifetime monitoring spans are displayed.
  • All States—Number of all client transactions
  • Initial—State when initial server transaction is created before a request is sent
  • Trying—Number of times the “trying” state was entered due to the sending of a request
  • Calling—Number of times that the “calling” state was entered due to the receipt of an INVITE request
  • Proceeding—Number of times that the “proceeding” state was entered due to the receipt of a provisional response while in the “calling” state
  • Early Media—Number of times that the “proceeding” state was entered due to the receipt of a provisional response that contained SDP while in the “calling” state
  • Completed—Number of times that the “completed” state was entered due to the receipt of a status code in the range of 300-699 when either in the “calling” or “proceeding” state
  • SetMedia—Number of transactions in which the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller is setting up NAT and steering ports
  • Established—Number of situations when client receives a 2xx response to an INVITE, but cannot forward it because it NAT and steering port information is missing
  • Terminated—Number of times the “terminated” state was entered after a 2xx message
acls—Display ACL information for Period and Lifetime monitoring spans
  • Total entries—Total ACL Entries, including both trusted and blocked
  • Trusted—Number of trusted ACL entries
  • Blocked—Number of blocked ACL entries
  • Blocked NATs—Number of blocked entries that are behind NATs

    Lifetime monitoring span is displayed for SIP ACL Operations.

  • ACL Requests—Number of ACL requests
  • Bad Messages —Number of bad messages
  • Promotions—Number of ACL entry promotions
  • Demotions—Number of ACL entry demotions
  • Trust->Untrust—Number of ACL entries demoted from trusted to untrusted
  • Untrust->Deny—Number of acl entries demoted from untrusted to deny
sessions—Display the number of sessions and dialogs in various states for the Period and Lifetime monitoring spans, in addition to the current Active count:
  • Sessions—Identical to the identically named statistic on the show sipd status command
  • Initial—Displays sessions for which an INVITE of SUBSCRIBE is being forwarded
  • Early—Displays sessions for which the first provisional response (1xx other than 100) is received
  • Established—Displays sessions for which a success (2xx) response is received
  • Terminated—Displays sessions for which the session is ended by receiving or sending a BYE for an “Established" session or forwarding an error response for an "Initial" or "Early" session. The session will remain in the "Terminated" state until all the resources for the session are freed.
  • Dialogs—Identical to the identically named statistic on the show sipd status command
  • Early—Displays dialogs that were created by a provisional response
  • Confirmed—Displays dialogs that were created by a success response. An "Early" dialog will transition to "Confirmed" when a success response is received
  • Terminated—Displays dialogs that were ended by receiving/sending a BYE for an Established" session or receiving/sending error response "Early" dialog. The dialog will remain in the "Terminated" state until all the resources for the session are freed.

sessions all—Display all SIP sessions currently on the system

sessions by-agent <agent name>—Display SIP sessions for the session agent specified; adding iwf to the end of the command shows sessions for the IWF; adding detail to the end of the command expands the displayed information

sessions by-ip <endpoint IP address>—Display SIP sessions for the specified IP address for an endpoint; adding iwf to the end of the command shows sessions for the IWF; adding detail to the end of the command expands the displayed information

sessions by-user <calling or called number>—Display SIP sessions for the specified user; adding iwf to the end of the command shows sessions for the IWF; adding detail to the end of the command expands the displayed information

sessions by-callid <call ID>—Display SIP sessions for the specified call ID; adding iwf to the end of the command shows sessions for the IWF; adding detail to the end of the command expands the displayed information

redundancy—Display sipd redundancy statistics. Executing the show sipd redundancy command is the equivalent to the show redundancy sipd command.

agents [hostname][method][-t]—Display statistics related to defined SIP session agents. Entering this command without any arguments list all SIP session agents. By adding the IP address or hostname of a session agent as well as a specified method at the end of the command, you can display statistics for that specific session agent and method. For a specific session agent, identified by IP address, the show sipd agents command lists:
  • session agent state
    • D—disabled
    • I—in-service
    • O—out-of-service
    • S—transitioning from out-of-service to in-service
  • inbound and outbound statistics
  • average and maximum latency for each session agent
  • maximum burst rate for each session agent as total number of session invitations sent to or received from the session agent within the amount of time configured in the burst-rate-window field

    Inbound Statistics:

  • Active—Number of active sessions sent to each session agent listed
  • Rate—Average rate of session invitations (per second) sent to each session agent listed
  • ConEx—Number of times the constraints have been exceeded

    Outbound Statistics:

  • Active—Number of active sessions sent from each session agent
  • Rate—Average rate of session invitations (per second) sent from each session agent listed
  • ConEx—Number of times the constraints have been exceeded

    Latency:

  • Avg—Average latency for packets traveling to and from each session agent
  • Max—Maximum latency for packets traveling to and from each session agent listed

-t—Append to the end of the command to specify the current time period for the max-burst value.

interface [interface-id][method]—Display SIP interface statistics. By adding the optional interface-id and method arguments you can narrow the display to view just the interface and method you want to view.

ip-cac <IP address>—Display CAC parameters for an IP address

publish—Display statistics related to incoming SIP PUBLISH messages

agent <agent>—Display activity for the session agent that you specify
  • Inbound Sessions:

    Rate Exceeded—Number of times session or burst rate was exceeded for inbound sessions
  • Num Exceeded—Number of times time constraints were exceeded for inbound sessions

    Outbound Sessions:

  • Rate Exceeded—Number of times session or burst rate was exceeded for outbound sessions
  • Num Exceeded—Number of times time constraints were exceeded for inbound sessions
  • Burst—Number of times burst rate was exceeded for this session agent
  • Out of Service—Number of times this session agent went out of service
  • Trans Timeout—Number of transactions timed out for this session agent
  • Requests Sent—Number of requests sent by way of this session agent
  • Requests Complete—Number of requests that have been completed for this session agent
  • Messages Received—Number of messages received by this session agent

realm—Display realm statistics related to SIP processing

routers—Display status of Oracle Communications Session Border Controller connections for session router functionality

directors—Display the status of Oracle Communications Session Border Controller connections for session director functionality

<message>—Add one of the following arguments to the end of a show sipd command to display information about that type of SIP message:
  • INVITE—Display the number of SIP transactions including an INVITE method
  • REGISTER—Display the number of SIP transactions including a REGISTER method
  • OPTIONS—Display the number of SIP transactions including an OPTIONS method
  • CANCEL—Display the number of SIP transactions including a CANCEL method
  • BYE—Display the number of SIP transactions including a BYE method
  • ACK—Display the number of SIP transactions including an ACK method
  • INFO—Display the number of SIP transactions including an INFO method
  • PRACK—Display the number of SIP transactions including a PRACK method
  • SUBSCRIBE—Display the number of SIP transactions including a SUBSCRIBE method
  • NOTIFY—Display the number of SIP transactions including a NOTIFY method
  • REFER—Display the number of SIP transactions including a REFER method
  • UPDATE—Display the number of SIP transactions including an UPDATE method
  • other—Display the number of SIP transactions including non-compliant methods and protocols used by specific customers

    The following lists information displayed for each individual SIP message statistic. Some or all of the following messages and events may appear in the output from a show sipd command.

  • INVITE Requests—Number of times method has been received or sent
  • Retransmissions—Information regarding sipd message command requests received by the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller
  • 100 Trying—Number of times some unspecified action is being taken on behalf of a call (e.g., a database is being consulted), but user has not been located
  • 180 Ringing—Number of times called UA identified a location where user has registered recently and is trying to alert the user
  • 200 OK—Number of times request has succeeded
  • 408 Request Timeout—Number of times server could not produce a response before timeout
  • 481 Does Not Exist—Number of times UAS received a request not matching existing dialog or transaction
  • 486 Busy Here—Number of times callee's end system was contacted successfully but callee not willing to take additional calls
  • 487 Terminated—Number of times request was cancelled by a BYE or CANCEL request
  • 4xx Client Error—Number of times the 4xx class of status code appeared for cases where the client seems to have erred
  • 503 Service Unavail—Number of times server was unable to handle the request due to a temporary overloading or maintenance of the server
  • 5xx Server Error—Number of times the 5xx class of status code appeared
  • Response Retrsns—Number of response re-transmissions sent and received
  • Transaction Timeouts— Number of times a transaction timed out. The timer related to this transaction is Timer B, as defined in RFC 3261
  • Locally Throttled—Number of locally throttled invites. Does not apply to a server.

    show sipd <message> output is divided in two sections: Server and Client, with information for recent, total, and period maximum time frames. This command also displays information about the average and maximum latency. For each type of SIP message, only those transactions for which there are statistics are shown. If there is no data available for a certain SIP message, the system displays the fact that there is none and specifies the message about which you inquired.

groups—Display cumulative information for all session agent groups on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller. This information is compiled by totaling the session agent statistics for all of the session agents that make up a particular session agent group. While the show sipd groups command accesses the sub-commands described in this section, the main show sipd groups command (when executed with no arguments) displays a list of all session agent groups.

groups -v—Display statistics for the session agents that make up the session agent groups that are being reported. The -v (meaning “verbose”) executed with this command must be included to provide verbose detail.

groups <specific group name>— Display statistics for the specified session agent group

endpoint-ip <phone number> —Displays registration information for a designation endpoint entered in the <phone number> argument; also show IMS-AKA data

all—Display all the show sipd statistics listed above

sip-endpoint-ip—See show sipd endpoint-ip

sa-nsep-burst—Display NSEP burst rate for all SIP session agents

subscriptions-by-user—Display data for SIP per user subscribe dialog limit

rate—Displays the transaction rate of SIP messages

codecs—Displays codec usage per realm, including counts for codecs that require a license such as SILK and Opus.

pooled-transcoding—Pooled transcoding information for the client and server User Agents on the A-SBC.

srvcc—SRVCC handover counts including ATCF and EATF sessions.
  • Total Calls - Total calls subjected to SRVCC

  • Total Success - Total successful SRVCC hand-off
  • Total Failed - Total failed SRVCC hand-off
  • Calls After Answer - Total calls subjected to SRVCC in established phase
  • After Answer Success - Total successful SRVCC hand-off in established phase
  • After Answer Failed - Total failed SRVCC hand-off in established phase
  • Calls During Alerting - Total calls subjected to SRVCC in alerting phase
  • During Alerting Success - Total successful SRVCC hand-off in alerting phase
  • During Alerting Failed - Total failed SRVCC hand-off in alerting phase
  • ATCF Cancellation - Total ATCF cancellations
  • Total Emergency Calls - Total SRVCC hand-off for Emergency calls
  • Emergency Success - Total successful SRVCC hand-off for Emergency calls
  • Emergency Failed - Total failed SRVCC hand-off for Emergency calls
  • EATF Cancellation - Total EATF Cancellations

tcp—Displays TCP connection state information for the following

  • inbound
  • outbound
  • listen
  • IMS-AKA
  • total
tcp connections—Dump TCP connections for analysis. Options include:
  • sip-interface—Optional parameter that limits output to sockets in the specified sip-interface
  • start start—Integer indicating which connection to start display. This can be a negative number. If the number selected for the start variable is greater than the number of TCP connections, nothing will be displayed
  • start-count start—Integer as per above plus the count integer, specifying how many TCP connections to display from the start.
  • all—Dump all of the sipd tcp connections. Exercise caution due to the possibility of consuming all CPU time; preferably use during a maintenance window

show snmp-community-table

Syntax

show snmp-community-table

The show snmp-community-table command displays all information for configured SNMP communities including request and responses for each community.

Example

ORACLE# show snmp-community-table

show snmp-info

Syntax

You can view summary SNMP agent run-time configuration and statistical packet-count information by using this command with no additional parameters.

Note:

All arguments of this command display run-time configuration information.
show snmp-info [addresses | all | groups | statistics | summary | users | views]
Arguments
  • addresses—Display device IP addresses, their subnet mask entries and request, reply, and trap counters.
  • all—Display detailed system-level SNMPv3 counters.
  • groups—Display user group entries.
  • statistics—Display SNMP agent statistics and device SNMP IP address entry statistics.
  • summary—SNMPv3 agent information.
  • users— Display SNMP user entries and statistics.
  • views—Display SNMP view entries.

Release

Initial release: S-CX8.1.0

show spl

The show spl command displays the version of the SPL engine, The filenames and version of the SPL plugins currently loaded on the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller, The signature state of each plugin , The system tasks that each loaded plugin interacts with, enclosed in brackets.

show spl <task> — command displays SPL file information including the signature state.

show support-info

Syntax

show support-info [custom | standard | media | signaling] <config>

This command allows you to gather a set of information commonly requested by Oracle Support.

Arguments

custom — Display information in the /code/supportinfo.cmds file to determine what commands should be encompassed. If the file does not exist, then the system notifies you.

standard — Display information for all commands the show support-info command encompasses.

media — Display and write out only the show media commands to the log file.

signaling — Display and write out all commands and exclude the show media commands to the log file.

config — Optionally add the show running-config output to the output of the standard arguments.

Example

ORACLE# show support-info 

show system-state

Syntax

show system-state

Displays the system state based on the latest setting of the set-system-state command.

Example

ORACLE# show system-state

show tacacs

Syntax

show tacacs stats

Displays statistics related to communications between the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller and configured TACACS servers, including:

  • number of ACLI commands sent for TACACS+ accounting
  • number of successful TACACS+ authentications
  • number of failed TACACS+ authentications
  • number of successful TACACS+ authorizations
  • number of failed TACACS+ authentications
  • the IP address of the TACACS+ daemon used for the last transaction

show temperature

Syntax

show temperature

Displays the temperature in Celsius for all given components with temperature sensors.

Example

ORACLE# show temperature

show timezone

Syntax

show timezone

This command displays the information set with the timezone-set command including the name of the timezone, its minutes from UTC, and the start and stop date and hours for daylight saving time.

The show timezone command also displays the DST settings. If rules-based DST configuration is used, the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller converts the rule into the absolute DST start or end time for the current year.

Example

ORACLE# show timezone
America/New_York

show trap-receiver

Syntax

show trap-receiver

The show trap-receiver command displays trap receiver information for each configured SNMP community. An IPv6 address is valid as a parameter.

Example

ORACLE# show trap-receiver <IP-address>

show tscf-stats

Syntax

show tscf-stats

The show tscf-stats command displays TSCF statistical information collected from SBC SNMP MIB objects.

The following statistics are displayed when this command is entered:

Example

ORACLE# show tscf-stats

        TSCF server statistics : 
        ======================== 
                Active Tunnels                                       : 0
                Established Tunnels                                  : 0
                Finished Tunnels                                     :	0
                Released Tunnels                                     : 0
                Max Active Tunnels                                   : 0
                Total number of Tunnels timed out                    : 0

                Config requests received                             : 0
                       Nagle option requests                         : 0
                Config responses sent                                : 0
                Config release requests received                     : 0
                Config release responses sent                        : 0
                Client service requests received                     : 0
                Client service responses sent                        : 0
                       Enable DDT request                            : 0
                       Disable DDT request                           : 0
                       Enable redundancy request                     : 0
                       Disable redundancy request                    : 0
                Keep Alive messages received                         : 0
                Keep Alive responses sent                            : 0
                Keep Alive messages sent                             : 0
                Keep Alive responses received                        : 0
                Control message retransmissions                      : 0

                Failed Tunnels - Malformed Request                   : 0
                       Unknown Control message                       : 0
                       Client assigned internal IP                   : 0
                       Cannot provision internal IP                  : 0
                       Internal IP already provisioned               : 0
                       Internal IP error                             : 0
                       Client assigned internal IP mask              : 0
                       Cannot provision internal IP mask             : 0
                       Internal IP mask already provisioned          : 0
                       Internal IP mask error                        : 0
                       Client assigned SIP server address            : 0
                       Cannot provision SIP server address           : 0
                       SIP server address already provisioned        : 0
                       SIP server address error                      : 0
                       Client assigned Keep Alive value              : 0
                       Cannot provision Keep Alive value             : 0
                       Keep Alive value already provisioned          : 0
                       Keep alive value error                        : 0
                Failed Tunnels - Non Existing Tunnel Id              : 0
                Failed Tunnels - Out of Resources                    : 0
                       Internal IP address exhausted                 : 0
                       Non null IP address                           : 0
                       Non null IP Mask                              : 0
                       Non Null SIP server                           : 0
                       Non zero keep alive                           : 0
                       No listening socket                           : 0
                Failed Tunnels - Server Failure                      : 0
                       Redundancy not enabled                        : 0
                       Redundancy factor limit exceeded              : 0
                       TunnelId exhausted                            : 0
                       Timer failures                                : 0
                       DDT service not enabled                       : 0
                       DDT request on wrong transport                : 0
                       DDT service only for datagram transports      : 0
                       Inconsistent transport for DDT                : 0
                       Unknown service type requested                : 0
                       Incorrect CM for established tunnel           : 0
                       Address pool unavailable                      : 0
                       No listening socket                           : 0
                Failed Tunnels - Version Not Supported               : 0
                Failed Tunnels - License Exceeded                    : 0
                Packets sent to unused TSCF IP address               : 0
                Control messages with wrong sequence number          : 0
                Packets dropped due to inter-client communication    : 0

                Config requests dropped due to license limit         : 0
                Config requests dropped due to per interface limit   : 0

                Stats memory allocations                             : 0
                Stats memory frees                                   : 0
                Stats memory allocations failures                    : 0
                Switches to Active system                            : 0
                Switches to StandBy system                           : 0

                Get DTLS Context Requests                            : 0
                Get DTLS Context Request Success                     : 0
                Get DTLS Context Request Failure                     : 0
                Set DTLS Context Requests                            : 0
                Set DTLS Context Request Success                     : 0
                Set DTLS Context Request Failure                     : 0

                FD Table Size                                        : 5
                Address Table Size                                   : 2
                Tunnel Table Size                                    : 0
                Active Tunnel Table Size                             : 0
                Peer Table Size                                      : 0
                Flow ID Table Size                                   : 0
                License Tunnel Count                                 : 0

show uptime

Syntax

show uptime

The show uptime command displays information about the length of time the system has been running in days, hours, minutes, and seconds, as well as the current date and time information.

Example

ORACLE# show uptime

show users

Syntax

show users

The show users command displays all users currently logged into the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller by index number. Other display information includes:

  • Task-ID
  • remote IP address—Only displayed for SSH connections
  • IdNumber
  • Duration of connection
  • Connection Type
  • State—* Denotes the current connection

Example

ORACLE# show users 

show version

Syntax

show version [image]

The show version command shows the OS version information including: the OS version number, the date that the current copy of the OS was made, and other information.

Arguments

image — Displays kernel information and boot parameters.

Example

ORACLE# show version 

show virtual-interfaces

Syntax

show virtual-interface

The show virtual-interface command shows the virtual interfaces forOracle Communications Session Border Controller signaling services; for example, SIP-NAT external address and H.323 interface (stack) IP interface.

Example

ORACLE# show virtual-interfaces 

show voltage

Syntax

show voltage

Displays current operating voltages for components in the Oracle Communications Session Border Controller.


Mode

User and Superuser

Example

ORACLE# show voltage

show wancom

Syntax

show wancom

Displays negotiated duplex mode and speed for all Oracle Communications Session Border Controller system control interfaces.


Mode

User and Superuser

Example

ORACLE# show wancom

show xcode

Syntax

show xcode [api-stats | dbginfo | dsp-events | load | session-all | session-bitinfo | session-byattr | session-byid | session-byipp | session-config | xlist | codecs]

Displays transcoding hardware statistics and operating information. Commands of note:

show xcode load—Displays currently used transcoding resources.

show xcode codecs—Displays counts of codec pairs (and ptime transrating) in use.

Mode

User and Superuser