Table 87: show mpls tunnels Output Fields (continued)
Field DescriptionField Name
Status of tunnel: Establishing, Traffic Engineering Negotiation, Up,
Down, Enabled with Incomplete Config, Disabled with Incomplete
Config, Disabled, or Releasing
State
Location of tunnelon
Protocols to which the tunnel is announcedtunnel is announced to
Metric type, relative or absolutemetric
PHB ID supported by this tunnel; for E-LSPs an additional exp-bits
entry is displayed after the phb-id entry
phb-id
Number of packets sent across tunnelpkts
Number of high-capacity (64-bit) packets sent across tunnelhcPkts
Number of octets sent across tunneloctets
Number of high-capacity (64-bit) octets sent across tunnelhcOctets
Number of packets that are dropped for some reason before being
sent
errors
Number of packets that are discarded due to lack of buffer space
before being sent
discardPkts
Tunnel identifiername/id
Tunnel destination; router ID of egress routerdestination
Value of tunnel metric and whether the metric is relative (R) or
absolute (A)
metric
Functional state of tunnel, label for the tunnel, and interface where
tunnel resides
state/label/intf
Related Topics show mpls tunnels•
Verifying and Troubleshooting MPLS Connectivity
In IP networks, you can use the ping and traceroute commands to verify network
connectivity and find broken links or loops . In an MPLS-enabled network, you can use
the mpls ping and trace mpls commands to detect plane failures in different types of
MPLS applications and network topologies.
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.370
JunosE 11.2.x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide