Basic Commands

The following sections discuss commands common to all the routing daemons.

Config Commands

In a config file, you can write the debugging options, a vty’s password, routing daemon configurations, a log file name, and so forth. This information forms the initial command set for a routing beast as it is starting.

Config files are generally found in /etc/frr.

Config Methods

There are two ways of configuring FRR.

Traditionally each of the daemons had its own config file. The daemon name plus .conf was the default config file name. For example, zebra’s default config file was zebra.conf. This method is deprecated.

Because of the amount of config files this creates, and the tendency of one daemon to rely on others for certain functionality, most deployments now use “integrated” configuration. In this setup all configuration goes into a single file, typically /etc/frr/frr.conf. When starting up FRR using an init script or systemd, vtysh is invoked to read the config file and send the appropriate portions to only the daemons interested in them. Running configuration updates are persisted back to this single file using vtysh. This is the recommended method. To use this method, add the following line to /etc/frr/vtysh.conf:

service integrated-vtysh-config

If you installed from source or used a package, this is probably already present.

If desired, you can specify a config file using the -f or --config_file options when starting a daemon.

Basic Config Commands

hostname HOSTNAME

Set hostname of the router. It is only for current vtysh, it will not be saved to any configuration file even with write file.

domainname DOMAINNAME

Set domainname of the router. It is only for current vtysh, it will not be saved to any configuration file even with write file.

password PASSWORD

Set password for vty interface. The no form of the command deletes the password. If there is no password, a vty won’t accept connections.

enable password PASSWORD

Set enable password. The no form of the command deletes the enable password.

service cputime-stats

Collect CPU usage statistics for individual FRR event handlers and CLI commands. This is enabled by default and can be disabled if the extra overhead causes a noticeable slowdown on your system.

Disabling these statistics will also make the service cputime-warning (1-4294967295) limit non-functional.

service cputime-warning (1-4294967295)

Warn if the CPU usage of an event handler or CLI command exceeds the specified limit (in milliseconds.) Such warnings are generally indicative of some routine in FRR mistakenly blocking/hogging the processing loop and should be reported as a FRR bug.

The default limit is 5 seconds (i.e. 5000), but this can be changed by the deprecated --enable-time-check=... compile-time option.

This command has no effect if service cputime-stats is disabled.

service walltime-warning (1-4294967295)

Warn if the total wallclock time spent handling an event or executing a CLI command exceeds the specified limit (in milliseconds.) This includes time spent waiting for I/O or other tasks executing and may produce excessive warnings if the system is overloaded. (This may still be useful to provide an immediate sign that FRR is not operating correctly due to externally caused starvation.)

The default limit is 5 seconds as above, including the same deprecated --enable-time-check=... compile-time option.

log trap LEVEL

These commands are deprecated and are present only for historical compatibility. The log trap command sets the current logging level for all enabled logging destinations, and it sets the default for all future logging commands that do not specify a level. The normal default logging level is debugging. The no form of the command resets the default level for future logging commands to debugging, but it does not change the logging level of existing logging destinations.

log stdout LEVEL

Enable logging output to stdout. If the optional second argument specifying the logging level is not present, the default logging level (typically debugging) will be used. The no form of the command disables logging to stdout. The LEVEL argument must have one of these values: emergencies, alerts, critical, errors, warnings, notifications, informational, or debugging. Note that the existing code logs its most important messages with severity errors.

Warning

FRRouting uses the writev() system call to write log messages. This call is supposed to be atomic, but in reality this does not hold for pipes or terminals, only regular files. This means that in rare cases, concurrent log messages from distinct threads may get jumbled in terminal output. Use a log file and tail -f if this rare chance is inacceptable to your setup.

log file [FILENAME [LEVEL]]

If you want to log into a file, please specify filename as in this example:

log file /var/log/frr/bgpd.log informational

If the optional second argument specifying the logging level is not present, the default logging level (typically debugging, but can be changed using the deprecated log trap command) will be used. The no form of the command disables logging to a file.

log syslog [LEVEL]

Enable logging output to syslog. If the optional second argument specifying the logging level is not present, the default logging level (typically debugging, but can be changed using the deprecated log trap command) will be used. The no form of the command disables logging to syslog.

log monitor [LEVEL]

Enable logging output to vty terminals that have enabled logging using the terminal monitor command. By default, monitor logging is enabled at the debugging level, but this command (or the deprecated log trap command) can be used to change the monitor logging level. If the optional second argument specifying the logging level is not present, the default logging level (typically debugging) will be used. The no form of the command disables logging to terminal monitors.

log facility [FACILITY]

This command changes the facility used in syslog messages. The default facility is daemon. The no form of the command resets the facility to the default daemon facility.

log record-priority

To include the severity in all messages logged to a file, to stdout, or to a terminal monitor (i.e. anything except syslog), use the log record-priority global configuration command. To disable this option, use the no form of the command. By default, the severity level is not included in logged messages. Note: some versions of syslogd can be configured to include the facility and level in the messages emitted.

log timestamp precision [(0-6)]

This command sets the precision of log message timestamps to the given number of digits after the decimal point. Currently, the value must be in the range 0 to 6 (i.e. the maximum precision is microseconds). To restore the default behavior (1-second accuracy), use the no form of the command, or set the precision explicitly to 0.

log timestamp precision 3

In this example, the precision is set to provide timestamps with millisecond accuracy.

log commands

This command enables the logging of all commands typed by a user to all enabled log destinations. The note that logging includes full command lines, including passwords. If the daemon startup option –command-log-always is used to start the daemon then this command is turned on by default and cannot be turned off and the [no] form of the command is dissallowed.

log filtered-file [FILENAME [LEVEL]]

Configure a destination file for filtered logs with the log filter-text WORD command.

log filter-text WORD

This command forces logs to be filtered on a specific string. A log message will only be printed if it matches on one of the filters in the log-filter table. The filter only applies to file logging targets configured with log filtered-file [FILENAME [LEVEL]].

Note

Log filters help when you need to turn on debugs that cause significant load on the system (enabling certain debugs can bring FRR to a halt). Log filters prevent this but you should still expect a small performance hit due to filtering each of all those logs.

Note

This setting is not saved to frr.conf and not shown in show running-config. It is intended for ephemeral debugging purposes only.

clear log filter-text

This command clears all current filters in the log-filter table.

log immediate-mode

Use unbuffered output for log and debug messages; normally there is some internal buffering.

service password-encryption

Encrypt password.

service advanced-vty

Enable advanced mode VTY.

service terminal-length (0-512)

Set system wide line configuration. This configuration command applies to all VTY interfaces.

line vty

Enter vty configuration mode.

banner motd default

Set default motd string.

banner motd file FILE

Set motd string from file. The file must be in directory specified under --sysconfdir.

banner motd line LINE

Set motd string from an input.

exec-timeout MINUTE [SECOND]

Set VTY connection timeout value. When only one argument is specified it is used for timeout value in minutes. Optional second argument is used for timeout value in seconds. Default timeout value is 10 minutes. When timeout value is zero, it means no timeout.

Not setting this, or setting the values to 0 0, means a timeout will not be enabled.

access-class ACCESS-LIST

Restrict vty connections with an access list.

Sample Config File

Below is a sample configuration file for the zebra daemon.

!
! Zebra configuration file
!
frr version 6.0
frr defaults traditional
!
hostname Router
password zebra
enable password zebra
!
log stdout
!
!

! and # are comment characters. If the first character of the word is one of the comment characters then from the rest of the line forward will be ignored as a comment.

password zebra!password

If a comment character is not the first character of the word, it’s a normal character. So in the above example ! will not be regarded as a comment and the password is set to zebra!password.

Configuration versioning, profiles and upgrade behavior

All frr daemons share a mechanism to specify a configuration profile and version for loading and saving configuration. Specific configuration settings take different default values depending on the selected profile and version.

While the profile can be selected by user configuration and will remain over upgrades, frr will always write configurations using its current version. This means that, after upgrading, a write file may write out a slightly different configuration than what was read in.

Since the previous configuration is loaded with its version’s defaults, but the new configuration is written with the new defaults, any default that changed between versions will result in an appropriate configuration entry being written out. FRRouting configuration is sticky, staying consistent over upgrades. Changed defaults will only affect new configuration.

Note that the loaded version persists into interactive configuration sessions. Commands executed in an interactive configuration session are no different from configuration loaded at startup. This means that when, say, you configure a new BGP peer, the defaults used for configuration are the ones selected by the last frr version command.

Warning

Saving the configuration does not bump the daemons forward to use the new version for their defaults, but restarting them will, since they will then apply the new frr version command that was written out. Manually execute the frr version command in show running-config to avoid this intermediate state.

This is visible in show running-config:

Current configuration:
!
! loaded from 6.0
frr version 6.1-dev
frr defaults traditional
!

If you save and then restart with this configuration, the old defaults will no longer apply. Similarly, you could execute frr version 6.1-dev, causing the new defaults to apply and the loaded from 6.0 comment to disappear.

Profiles

frr provides configuration profiles to adapt its default settings to various usage scenarios. Currently, the following profiles are implemented:

  • traditional - reflects defaults adhering mostly to IETF standards or common practices in wide-area internet routing.

  • datacenter - reflects a single administrative domain with intradomain links using aggressive timers.

Your distribution/installation may pre-set a profile through the -F command line option on all daemons. All daemons must be configured for the same profile. The value specified on the command line is only a pre-set and any frr defaults statement in the configuration will take precedence.

Note

The profile must be the same across all daemons. Mismatches may result in undefined behavior.

You can freely switch between profiles without causing any interruption or configuration changes. All settings remain at their previous values, and show running-configuration output will have new output listing the previous default values as explicit configuration. New configuration, e.g. adding a BGP peer, will use the new defaults. To apply the new defaults for existing configuration, the previously-invisible old defaults that are now shown must be removed from the configuration.

Upgrade practices for interactive configuration

If you configure frr interactively and use the configuration writing functionality to make changes persistent, the following recommendations apply in regards to upgrades:

  1. Skipping major versions should generally work but is still inadvisable. To avoid unneeded issue, upgrade one major version at a time and write out the configuration after each update.

  2. After installing a new frr version, check the configuration for differences against your old configuration. If any defaults changed that affect your setup, lines may appear or disappear. If a new line appears, it was previously the default (or not supported) and is now neccessary to retain previous behavior. If a line disappears, it previously wasn’t the default, but now is, so it is no longer necessary.

  3. Check the log files for deprecation warnings by using grep -i deprecat.

  4. After completing each upgrade, save the configuration and either restart frr or execute frr version <CURRENT> to ensure defaults of the new version are fully applied.

Upgrade practices for autogenerated configuration

When using frr with generated configurations (e.g. Ansible, Puppet, etc.), upgrade considerations differ somewhat:

  1. Always write out a frr version statement in the configurations you generate. This ensures that defaults are applied consistently.

  2. Try to not run more distinct versions of frr than necessary. Each version may need to be checked individually. If running a mix of older and newer installations, use the oldest version for the frr version statement.

  3. When rolling out upgrades, generate a configuration as usual with the old version identifier and load it. Check for any differences or deprecation warnings. If there are differences in the configuration, propagate these back to the configuration generator to minimize relying on actual default values.

  4. After the last installation of an old version is removed, change the configuration generation to a newer frr version as appropriate. Perform the same checks as when rolling out upgrades.

Terminal Mode Commands

write terminal

Displays the current configuration to the vty interface.

write file

Write current configuration to configuration file.

configure [terminal]

Change to configuration mode. This command is the first step to configuration.

terminal length (0-512)

Set terminal display length to (0-512). If length is 0, no display control is performed.

who

Show a list of currently connected vty sessions.

list

List all available commands.

show version

Show the current version of frr and its build host information.

show logging

Shows the current configuration of the logging system. This includes the status of all logging destinations.

show log-filter

Shows the current log filters applied to each daemon.

show memory [DAEMON]

Show information on how much memory is used for which specific things in frr. Output may vary depending on system capabilities but will generally look something like this:

frr# show memory
System allocator statistics:
  Total heap allocated:  1584 KiB
  Holding block headers: 0 bytes
  Used small blocks:     0 bytes
  Used ordinary blocks:  1484 KiB
  Free small blocks:     2096 bytes
  Free ordinary blocks:  100 KiB
  Ordinary blocks:       2
  Small blocks:          60
  Holding blocks:        0
(see system documentation for 'mallinfo' for meaning)
--- qmem libfrr ---
Buffer                        :          3      24                  72
Buffer data                   :          1    4120                4120
Host config                   :          3  (variably sized)        72
Command Tokens                :       3427      72              247160
Command Token Text            :       2555  (variably sized)     83720
Command Token Help            :       2555  (variably sized)     61720
Command Argument              :          2  (variably sized)        48
Command Argument Name         :        641  (variably sized)     15672
[...]
--- qmem Label Manager ---
--- qmem zebra ---
ZEBRA VRF                     :          1     912                 920
Route Entry                   :         11      80                 968
Static route                  :          1     192                 200
RIB destination               :          8      48                 448
RIB table info                :          4      16                  96
Nexthop tracking object       :          1     200                 200
Zebra Name Space              :          1     312                 312
--- qmem Table Manager ---

To understand system allocator statistics, refer to your system’s mallinfo(3) man page.

Below these statistics, statistics on individual memory allocation types in frr (so-called MTYPEs) is printed:

  • the first column of numbers is the current count of allocations made for the type (the number decreases when items are freed.)

  • the second column is the size of each item. This is only available if allocations on a type are always made with the same size.

  • the third column is the total amount of memory allocated for the particular type, including padding applied by malloc. This means that the number may be larger than the first column multiplied by the second. Overhead incurred by malloc’s bookkeeping is not included in this, and the column may be missing if system support is not available.

When executing this command from vtysh, each of the daemons’ memory usage is printed sequentially. You can specify the daemon’s name to print only its memory usage.

show history

Dump the vtysh cli history.

logmsg LEVEL MESSAGE

Send a message to all logging destinations that are enabled for messages of the given severity.

find REGEX...

This command performs a regex search across all defined commands in all modes. As an example, suppose you’re in enable mode and can’t remember where the command to turn OSPF segment routing on is:

frr# find segment-routing on
  (ospf)  segment-routing on
  (isis)  segment-routing on

The CLI mode is displayed next to each command. In this example, segment-routing on is under the router ospf mode.

Similarly, suppose you want a listing of all commands that contain “l2vpn” and “neighbor”:

frr# find l2vpn.*neighbor
  (view)  show [ip] bgp l2vpn evpn neighbors <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> advertised-routes [json]
  (view)  show [ip] bgp l2vpn evpn neighbors <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> routes [json]
  (view)  show [ip] bgp l2vpn evpn rd ASN:NN_OR_IP-ADDRESS:NN neighbors <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> advertised-routes [json]
  (view)  show [ip] bgp l2vpn evpn rd ASN:NN_OR_IP-ADDRESS:NN neighbors <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> routes [json]
  ...

Note that when entering spaces as part of a regex specification, repeated spaces will be compressed into a single space for matching purposes. This is a consequence of spaces being used to delimit CLI tokens. If you need to match more than one space, use the \s escape.

POSIX Extended Regular Expressions are supported.

show thread cpu [r|w|t|e|x]

This command displays system run statistics for all the different event types. If no options is specified all different run types are displayed together. Additionally you can ask to look at (r)ead, (w)rite, (t)imer, (e)vent and e(x)ecute thread event types. If you have compiled with disable-cpu-time then this command will not show up.

show thread poll

This command displays FRR’s poll data. It allows a glimpse into how we are setting each individual fd for the poll command at that point in time.

Common Invocation Options

These options apply to all frr daemons.

-d, --daemon

Run in daemon mode.

-f, --config_file <file>

Set configuration file name.

-h, --help

Display this help and exit.

-i, --pid_file <file>

Upon startup the process identifier of the daemon is written to a file, typically in /var/run. This file can be used by the init system to implement commands such as .../init.d/zebra status, .../init.d/zebra restart or .../init.d/zebra stop.

The file name is an run-time option rather than a configure-time option so that multiple routing daemons can be run simultaneously. This is useful when using frr to implement a routing looking glass. One machine can be used to collect differing routing views from differing points in the network.

-A, --vty_addr <address>

Set the VTY local address to bind to. If set, the VTY socket will only be bound to this address.

-P, --vty_port <port>

Set the VTY TCP port number. If set to 0 then the TCP VTY sockets will not be opened.

-u <user>

Set the user and group to run as.

-N <namespace>

Set the namespace that the daemon will run in. A “/<namespace>” will be added to all files that use the statedir. If you have “/var/run/frr” as the default statedir then it will become “/var/run/frr/<namespace>”.

-v, --version

Print program version.

--command-log-always

Cause the daemon to always log commands entered to the specified log file. This also makes the no log commands command dissallowed. Enabling this is suggested if you have need to track what the operator is doing on this router.

--log <stdout|syslog|file:/path/to/log/file>

When initializing the daemon, setup the log to go to either stdout, syslog or to a file. These values will be displayed as part of a show run. Additionally they can be overridden at runtime if desired via the normal log commands.

--log-level <emergencies|alerts|critical|errors|warnings|notifications|informational|debugging>

When initializing the daemon, allow the specification of a default log level at startup from one of the specified levels.

--tcli

Enable the transactional CLI mode.

--limit-fds <number>

Limit the number of file descriptors that will be used internally by the FRR daemons. By default, the daemons use the system ulimit value.

Loadable Module Support

FRR supports loading extension modules at startup. Loading, reloading or unloading modules at runtime is not supported (yet). To load a module, use the following command line option at daemon startup:

-M, --module <module:options>

Load the specified module, optionally passing options to it. If the module name contains a slash (/), it is assumed to be a full pathname to a file to be loaded. If it does not contain a slash, the /usr/lib/frr/modules directory is searched for a module of the given name; first with the daemon name prepended (e.g. zebra_mod for mod), then without the daemon name prepended.

This option is available on all daemons, though some daemons may not have any modules available to be loaded.

The SNMP Module

If SNMP is enabled during compile-time and installed as part of the package, the snmp module can be loaded for the Zebra, bgpd, ospfd, ospf6d and ripd daemons.

The module ignores any options passed to it. Refer to SNMP Support for information on its usage.

The FPM Module

If FPM is enabled during compile-time and installed as part of the package, the fpm module can be loaded for the zebra daemon. This provides the Forwarding Plane Manager (“FPM”) API.

The module expects its argument to be either Netlink or protobuf, specifying the encapsulation to use. Netlink is the default, and protobuf may not be available if the module was built without protobuf support. Refer to zebra FIB push interface for more information.

Virtual Terminal Interfaces

VTY – Virtual Terminal [aka TeletYpe] Interface is a command line interface (CLI) for user interaction with the routing daemon.

VTY Overview

VTY stands for Virtual TeletYpe interface. It means you can connect to the daemon via the telnet protocol.

To enable a VTY interface, you have to setup a VTY password. If there is no VTY password, one cannot connect to the VTY interface at all.

% telnet localhost 2601
Trying 127.0.0.1...
Connected to localhost.
Escape character is '^]'.

Hello, this is |PACKAGE_NAME| (version |PACKAGE_VERSION|)
|COPYRIGHT_STR|

User Access Verification

Password: XXXXX
Router> ?
  enable .  .  .  Turn on privileged commands
  exit   .  .  .  Exit current mode and down to previous mode
  help   .  .  .  Description of the interactive help system
  list   .  .  .  Print command list
  show   .  .  .  Show system inform

  wh. . .  Display who is on a vty
Router> enable
Password: XXXXX
Router# configure terminal
Router(config)# interface eth0
Router(config-if)# ip address 10.0.0.1/8
Router(config-if)# ^Z
Router#

VTY Modes

There are three basic VTY modes:

There are commands that may be restricted to specific VTY modes.

VTY View Mode

This mode is for read-only access to the CLI. One may exit the mode by leaving the system, or by entering enable mode.

VTY Enable Mode

This mode is for read-write access to the CLI. One may exit the mode by leaving the system, or by escaping to view mode.

VTY Other Modes

This page is for describing other modes.

VTY CLI Commands

Commands that you may use at the command-line are described in the following three subsubsections.

CLI Movement Commands

These commands are used for moving the CLI cursor. The C character means press the Control Key.

C-f / LEFT

Move forward one character.

C-b / RIGHT

Move backward one character.

M-f

Move forward one word.

M-b

Move backward one word.

C-a

Move to the beginning of the line.

C-e

Move to the end of the line.

CLI Editing Commands

These commands are used for editing text on a line. The C character means press the Control Key.

C-h / DEL

Delete the character before point.

C-d

Delete the character after point.

M-d

Forward kill word.

C-w

Backward kill word.

C-k

Kill to the end of the line.

C-u

Kill line from the beginning, erasing input.

C-t

Transpose character.

CLI Advanced Commands

There are several additional CLI commands for command line completions, insta-help, and VTY session management.

C-c

Interrupt current input and moves to the next line.

C-z

End current configuration session and move to top node.

C-n / DOWN

Move down to next line in the history buffer.

C-p / UP

Move up to previous line in the history buffer.

TAB

Use command line completion by typing TAB.

?

You can use command line help by typing help at the beginning of the line. Typing ? at any point in the line will show possible completions.

Pipe Actions

VTY supports optional modifiers at the end of commands that perform postprocessing on command output or modify the action of commands. These do not show up in the ? or TAB suggestion lists.

... | include REGEX

Filters the output of the preceding command, including only lines which match the POSIX Extended Regular Expression REGEX. Do not put the regex in quotes.

Examples:

frr# show ip bgp sum json | include remoteAs
      "remoteAs":0,
      "remoteAs":455,
      "remoteAs":99,
frr# show run | include neigh.*[0-9]{2}\.0\.[2-4]\.[0-9]*
 neighbor 10.0.2.106 remote-as 99
 neighbor 10.0.2.107 remote-as 99
 neighbor 10.0.2.108 remote-as 99
 neighbor 10.0.2.109 remote-as 99
 neighbor 10.0.2.110 remote-as 99
 neighbor 10.0.3.111 remote-as 111