Viewing Basic OSPF Statistics for a Port
Use statistics to help you monitor Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) performance. You can also use statistics in troubleshooting procedures.
Procedure
Example
View basic OSPF statistics:
Switch:1>enable
Switch:1#show ports statistics ospf main
================================================================================
                                Port Stats Ospf
================================================================================
PORT_NUM RX_HELLO   TX_HELLO   RXDB_DESCR TXDB_DESCR RXLS_UPDATE   TXLS_UPDATE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1/3      0          0          0          0          0             0
Variable Definitions
Use the data in the following table to use the show ports statistics ospf main command.
| 
 Variable  | 
 Value  | 
|---|---|
| 
 {slot/port[/sub-port][-slot/port[/sub-port]][,...]}  | 
 Identifies the slot and port in one of the following formats: a single slot and port (slot/port), a range of slots and ports (slot/port-slot/port), or a series of slots and ports (slot/port,slot/port,slot/port). If the platform supports channelization and the port is channelized, you must also specify the sub-port in the format slot/port/sub-port.  | 
Job Aid
The following table describes the output for the show ports statistics ospf main command.
| 
 Field  | 
 Description  | 
|---|---|
| 
 PORT NUM  | 
 Indicates the port number.  | 
| 
 RX_HELLO  | 
 Indicates the number of hello packets this interface receives.  | 
| 
 TX_HELLO  | 
 Indicates the number of hello packets this interface transmitted.  | 
| 
 RXDB_DESCR  | 
 Indicates the number of database descriptor packets this interface receives.  | 
| 
 TXDB_DESCR  | 
 Indicates the number of database descriptor packets this interface transmitted.  | 
| 
 RXLS_UPDATE  | 
 Indicates the number of link state update packets this interface receives.  | 
| 
 TXLS_UPDATE  | 
 Indicates the number of link state update packets this interface transmitted.  |