Use trace to observe the status of a software module at a given time.
trace level
trace level <<Module_ID> <0-4>
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5>
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> process WORD<1-20>
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> process WORD<1-20> slot <1-12>
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> process WORD<1-20> slot SF1
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> process WORD<1-20> slot SF2
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> process WORD<1-20> slot SF3
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> process WORD<1-20> slot SF4
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> process WORD<1-20> slot SF5
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> process WORD<1-20> slot SF6
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> slot SF1
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> slot SF2
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> slot SF3
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> slot SF4
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> slot SF5
trace level sub-system WORD<1-20> <0-5> slot SF6
<Module_ID> specifies the module for the trace. Different hardware platforms support different ID ranges because of feature support differences. To see which module IDs are available on the switch, use the show trace modid-list command or CLI command completion Help.
None
User EXEC