Cisco Commands Cheat Sheet
Almost all Cisco devices use Cisco IOS to operate and Cisco CLI to be managed. The basic CLI
commands for all of them are the same, which simplifies Cisco device management. Here is a
Cisco commands cheat sheet that describes the basic commands for configuring, securing and
troubleshooting Cisco network devices.
Basic Configuration Commands
Command Purpose
enable Logs you into enable mode, which is also
known as user exec mode or privileged mode
configure terminal Logs you into configuration mode
interface fastethernet/number Enters interface configuration mode for the
specified fast ethernet interface
reload An exec mode command that reboots a Cisco
switch or router
hostname name Sets a host name to the current Cisco network
device
copy from-location to-location An enable mode command that copies files
from one file location to another
copy running-config startup-config An enable mode command that saves the
active config, replacing the startup config
when a Cisco network device initializes
copy startup-config running-config An enable mode command that merges the
startup config with the currently active config
in RAM
write erase An enable mode command that deletes the
startup config
erase startup-config
ip address ip-address mask Assigns an IP address and a subnet mask
shutdown Used in interface configuration mode.
“Shutdown” shuts down the interface, while
no shutdown “no shutdown” brings up the interface.
ip default-gateway ip_address Sets the default gateway on a Cisco device
show running-config An enable mode command that displays the
current configuration
description name-string A config interface command to describe or
name an interface
show running-config interface interface An enable mode command to display the
slot/number running configuration for a specific interface
show ip interface [type number] Displays the usability status of interfaces that
are configured for IP
ip name-server serverip-1 serverip-2 A configure mode command that sets the IP
addresses of DNS servers
Troubleshooting Commands
ping {hostname | system-address} Used in enable mode to diagnose basic
[source source-address] network connectivity
speed {10 | 100 | 1000 | auto} An interface mode command that manually
sets the speed to the specified value or
negotiates it automatically
duplex {auto | full | half} An interface mode command that manually
sets duplex to half, full or auto
cdp run A configuration mode command that enables
or disables Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP)
no cdp run for the device
show mac address-table Displays the MAC address table
show cdp Shows whether CDP is enabled globally
show cdp neighbors[detail] Lists summary information about each
neighbor connected to this device; the “detail”
option lists detailed information about each
neighbor
show interfaces Displays detailed information about interface
status, settings and counters
show interface status Displays the interface line status
show interfaces switchport Displays a large variety of configuration
settings and current operational status,
including VLAN trunking details.
show interfaces trunk Lists information about the currently
operational trunks and the VLANs supported
by those trunks
show vlan Lists each VLAN and all interfaces assigned to
that VLAN but does not include trunks
show vlan brief
show vtp status Lists the current VTP status, including the
current mode
Routing and VLAN Commands
ip routenetwork-number network-mask {ip- Sets a static route in the IP routing table
address | interface}
router rip Enables a Routing Information Protocol (RIP)
routing process, which places you in router
configuration mode
network ip-address In router configuration mode, associates a
network with a RIP routing process
version 2 In router configuration mode, configures the
software to receive and send only RIP version
2 packets
no auto-summary In router configuration mode, disables
automatic summarization
default-information originate In router configuration mode, generates a
default route into RIP
passive-interface interface In router configuration mode, sets only that
interface to passive RIP mode. In passive RIP
mode, RIP routing updates are accepted by,
but not sent out of, the specified interface.
show ip rip database Displays the contents of the RIP routing
database
ip nat [inside | outside] An interface configuration mode command to
designate that traffic originating from or
destined for the interface is subject to NAT
ip nat inside source {list{access-list- A configuration mode command to establish
number | access-list-name}} interface type dynamic source translation. Use of
number[overload] the “list” keyword enables you to use an ACL
to identify the traffic that will be subject to
NAT. The “overload” option enables the
router to use one global address for many local
addresses.
ip nat inside source static local-ip global-ip A configuration mode command to establish a
static translation between an inside local
address and an inside global address
vlan Creates a VLAN and enters VLAN
configuration mode for further definitions
switchport access vlan Sets the VLAN that the interface belongs to.
switchport trunk encapsulation dot1q Specifies 802.1Q encapsulation on the trunk
link.
switchport access Assigns this port to a VLAN
vlan vlan-id [name vlan-name] Configures a specific VLAN name (1 to 32
characters)
switchport mode { access | trunk } Configures the VLAN membership mode of a
port. The access port is set to access
unconditionally and operates as a non-
trunking, single VLAN interface that sends
and receives non-encapsulated (non-tagged)
frames. An access port can be assigned to only
one VLAN.
The trunk port sends and receives
encapsulated (tagged) frames that identify the
VLAN of origination. A trunk is a point-to-
point link between two switches or between a
switch and a router.
switchport trunk {encapsulation { dot1q } Sets the trunk characteristics when the
interface is in trunking mode. In this mode, the
switch supports simultaneous tagged and
untagged traffic on a port.
encapsulation dot1q vlan-id A configuration mode command that defines
the matching criteria to map 802.1Q frames
ingress on an interface to the appropriate
service instance
DHCP Commands
ip address dhcp A configuration mode command to acquire an
IP address on an interface via DHCP
ip dhcp pool name A configuration mode command to configure a
DHCP address pool on a DHCP server and
enter DHCP pool configuration mode
domain-name domain Used in DHCP pool configuration mode to
specify the domain name for a DHCP client
network network-number [mask] Used in DHCP pool configuration mode to
configure the network number and mask for a
DHCP address pool primary or secondary
subnet on a Cisco IOS DHCP server
ip dhcp excluded-address ip-address [last- A configuration mode command to specify IP
ip-address] addresses that a DHCP server should not
assign to DHCP clients
ip helper-address address An interface configuration mode command to
enable forwarding of UDP broadcasts,
including BOOTP, received on an interface
default-router address[address2 ... Used in DHCP pool configuration mode to
address8] specify the default router list for a DHCP
client
Security Commands
passwordpass-value Lists the password that is required if
the login command (with no other parameters)
is configured
username name password pass-value A global command that defines one of possibly
multiple user names and associated passwords
used for user authentication. It is used when
the login local line configuration command has
been used.
enable password pass-value A configuration mode command that defines
the password required when using
the enable command
enable secretpass-value A configuration mode command that sets this
Cisco device password that is required for any
user to enter enable mode
service password-encryption A configuration mode command that directs
the Cisco IOS software to encrypt the
passwords, CHAP secrets, and similar data
saved in its configuration file
ip domain-name name Configures a DNS domain name
crypto key generate rsa A configuration mode command that creates
and stores (in a hidden location in flash
memory) the keys that are required by SSH
transport input {telnet | ssh} Used in vty line configuration mode, defines
whether Telnet or SSH access is allowed into
this switch. Both values can be specified in a
single command to allow both Telnet and SSH
access (default settings).
access-list access-list-number {deny | A configuration mode command that defines a
permit} source [source-wildcard] [log] standard IP access list
access-class Restricts incoming and outgoing connections
between a particular vty (into a basic Cisco
device) and the addresses in an access list
ip access-list {standard | extended} {access- A configuration mode command that defines
list-name | access-list-number} an IP access list by name or number
permit source [source-wildcard] Used in ACL configuration mode to set
conditions to allow a packet to pass a named
IP ACL. To remove a permit condition from
an ACL, use the “no” form of this command.
deny source [source-wildcard] Used in ACL configuration mode to set
conditions in a named IP ACL that will deny
packets. To remove a deny condition from an
ACL, use the “no” form of this command.
ntp peer <ip-address> Used in global configuration mode to
configure the software clock to synchronize a
peer or to be synchronized by a peer
switchport port-security Used in interface configuration mode to enable
port security on the interface
switchport port-security Used in interface configuration mode to set the
maximum maximum maximum number of secure MAC addresses
on the port
switchport port-security mac- Used in interface configuration mode to add a
address {mac-addr | {sticky [mac-addr]}} MAC address to the list of secure MAC
addresses. The “sticky” option configures the
MAC addresses as sticky on the interface.
switchport port-security Used in interface configuration mode to set the
violation {shutdown | restrict | protect} action to be taken when a security violation is
detected
show port security [interface interface-id] Displays information about security options
configured on the interface
Monitoring and Logging Commands
logging ip address Configures the IP address of the host that will
receive the system logging (syslog) messages
logging trap level Used in configuration mode to limit messages
that are logged to the syslog servers based on
severity. Specify the number or name of the
desired severity level at which messages
should be logged.
show logging Enable mode command that displays the state
of system logging (syslog) and the contents of
the standard system logging buffer.
terminal monitor An enable mode command that tells Cisco IOS
to send a copy of all syslog messages,
including debug messages, to the Telnet or
SSH user who issues this command
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