CDP Commands
Cisco Sx350 Ph. 2.2.5 Devices - Command Line Interface Reference Guide
transmitted by a stub router, it is a list of network prefixes of stub networks
to which the sending stub router can forward IP packets.
•
Management Address—When present, it contains a list of all the addresses
at which the device will accept SNMP messages, including those it will only
accept when received on interface(s) other than the one over which the
CDP packet is being sent.
•
MTU—The MTU of the interface via which the CDP packet is sent.
•
Native VLAN—The ID number of the VLAN on the neighbor device.
•
Physical Location—A character string indicating the physical location of a
connector which is on, or physically connected to, the interface over which
the CDP packet containing this TLV is sent.
•
Platform—The product name and number of the neighbor device. In the
case of the Secondary Cache only the 8 last characters of the value are
printed.
•
Power Available—Every switch interface transmits information in the Power
Available TLV, which permits a device which needs power to negotiate and
select an appropriate power setting. The Power Available TLV includes four
fields.
•
Power Consumption—The maximum amount of power, in milliwatts,
expected to be obtained and consumed from the interface over which the
CDP packet is sent.
•
Power Drawn—The maximum requested power.
Note: For IP Phones the value shown is the maximum requested power (6.3
Watts). This value can be different than the actual power supplied by the
routing device (generally 5 watts; shown using the show power command).
•
Protocol-Hello—Specifies that a particular protocol has asked CDP to
piggyback
its "hello" messages within transmitted CDP packets.
•
Remote Port_ID—Identifies the port the CDP packet is sent on
•
sysName—An ASCII string containing the same value as the sending
device's sysName MIB object.
•
sysObjectID—The OBJECT-IDENTIFIER value of the sending device's
sysObjectID MIB object.
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