12 ip addressing commands, 1 ip address – CANOGA PERKINS CanogaOS Command Reference User Manual

Page 213

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CanogaOS Command Line Reference

Revision 1.02

Proprietary & Confidential Canoga Pertkins Metro Ethernet Switches

Page 213 of 855

12 IP Addressing Commands

12.1 ip address

To set a primary or secondary IP address for an interface, use the ip address command in interface
configuration mode. To remove an IP address or disable IP processing, use the no form of this
command.


Command Syntax

ip address {address wildcard-mask | address/prefix-length} [secondary]

address

IPv4

address.

wildcard-mask

Mask for the associated IP subnet..

prefix-length

Prefix length of the address.

secondary

(Optional) Specifies that the configured address is a secondary IP
address. If this keyword is omitted, the configured address is the primary
IP address.


Default

No IP address is defined for the interface.


Command Mode

Interface configuration


Usage

An interface can have one primary IP address and multiple secondary IP addresses. Packets
generated by the switch always use the primary IP address. Therefore, all switches and access servers
on a segment should share the same primary network number.
Hosts can determine subnet masks using the Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) mask request
message. Switch respond to this request with an ICMP mask reply message.
You can disable IP processing on a particular interface by removing its IP address with the no ip
address
command. If the software detects another host using one of its IP addresses, it will print an
error message on the console.
The optional secondary keyword allows you to specify up to 15 secondary addresses. Secondary
addresses are treated like primary addresses, except the system never generates datagrams other
than routing updates with secondary source addresses. IP broadcasts and Address Resolution
Protocol (ARP) requests are handled properly, as are interface routes in the IP routing table.
Secondary IP addresses can be used in a variety of situations. The following are the most common
applications:
„

There may not be enough host addresses for a particular network segment. For example, your

subnetting allows up to 254 hosts per logical subnet, but on one physical subnet you need 300
host addresses. Using secondary IP addresses on the switchs or access servers allows you to
have two logical subnets using one physical subnet.

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