Table 154: show interfaces Fast Ethernet Output Fields (continued)
Level of OutputField DescriptionField Name
extensiveInformation about link autonegotiation.
• Negotiation status:
• Incomplete—Ethernet interface has the speed or link mode configured.
• No autonegotiation—Remote Ethernet interface has the speed or link mode
configured, or does not perform autonegotiation.
• Complete—Ethernet interface is connected to a device that performs
autonegotiation and the autonegotiation process is successful.
• Link partner status—OK when Ethernet interface is connected to a device that
performs autonegotiation and the autonegotiation process is successful.
• Link partner:
• Link mode—Depending on the capability of the attached Ethernet device,
either Full-duplex or Half-duplex.
• Flow control—Types of flow control supported by the remote Ethernet
device. For Fast Ethernet interfaces, the type is None. For Gigabit Ethernet
interfaces, types are Symmetric (link partner supports PAUSE on receive
and transmit), Asymmetric (link partner supports PAUSE on transmit), and
Symmetric/Asymmetric (link partner supports both PAUSE on receive and
transmit or only PAUSE receive).
• Remote fault—Remote fault information from the link partner—Failure
indicates a receive link error. OK indicates that the link partner is receiving.
Negotiation error indicates a negotiation error. Offline indicates that the
link partner is going offline.
• Local resolution—Information from the link partner:
• Flow control—Types of flow control supported by the remote Ethernet
device. For Gigabit Ethernet interfaces, types are Symmetric (link partner
supports PAUSE on receive and transmit), Asymmetric (link partner supports
PAUSE on transmit), and Symmetric/Asymmetric (link partner supports
both PAUSE on receive and transmit or only PAUSE receive).
• Remote fault—Remote fault information. Link OK (no error detected on
receive), Offline (local interface is offline), and Link Failure (link error
detected on receive).
Autonegotiation
information
extensive(10-Gigabit Ethernet interfaces, WAN PHY mode) SONET/SDH interfaces allow
path trace bytes to be sent inband across the SONET/SDH link. Juniper Networks
and other routing device manufacturers use these bytes to help diagnose
misconfigurations and network errors by setting the transmitted path trace
message so that it contains the system hostname and name of the physical
interface. The received path trace value is the message received from the routing
device at the other end of the fiber. The transmitted path trace value is the
message that this routing device transmits.
Received path
trace, Transmitted
path trace
extensiveInformation about the configuration of the Packet Forwarding Engine:
• Destination slot—FPC slot number.
Packet Forwarding
Engine
configuration
2659Copyright © 2017, Juniper Networks, Inc.
Chapter 42: Operational Commands