A small TCL script could be written and used for this purpose; of course,
the feasibility of this approach heavily depends on how frequently and how
much automation is required. You could then print only the IP, without
anything around it.
We had circulated one for OSPF areas before, if you search the GS backwards.
Cheers,
Adel Abouchaev, CCIE# 12037, CISSP, MCSE
Technical Support Engineer
Netmasterclass LLC, Cisco Learning Partner
RFC821: adel_at_netmasterclass.net
E.164: +18886772669
HTTP: www.netmasterclass.net
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody_at_groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody_at_groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
jason munns
Sent: Thursday, October 07, 2010 9:25 PM
To: Jeferson Guardia
Cc: Rob Routt Jr. (rrouttjr); Adam Booth; groupstudy
Subject: Re: Playing with PIPES
If you hold down the alt key while selecting text, you can select just
the ip addresses instead of the entire line, it saves having to
replace anything in notepad. This should work in putty and securecrt.
Jason
On 8 October 2010 16:53, Jeferson Guardia <jefersonf_at_gmail.com> wrote:
> I think you are correct, either way is giving me what I want
>
> R1#sh ip aliases
> Address Type             IP Address      Port
> Interface                6.6.6.6
> Interface                5.5.5.5
> Interface                4.4.4.4
> Interface                2.2.2.2
> Interface                1.1.1.1
> Interface                10.1.12.1
> Interface                125.1.1.1
> Interface                128.1.1.1
> Interface                131.1.1.1
> Interface                133.1.1.1
> Interface                132.1.1.1
> Interface                191.1.1.1
> Interface                193.1.1.1
> Interface                192.1.1.1
> Interface                195.1.1.1
> Interface                194.1.1.1
> Interface                200.1.1.1
> Interface                223.1.1.1
> R1#sh ip alias
> Address Type             IP Address      Port
> Interface                6.6.6.6
> Interface                5.5.5.5
> Interface                4.4.4.4
> Interface                2.2.2.2
> Interface                1.1.1.1
> Interface                10.1.12.1
> Interface                125.1.1.1
> Interface                128.1.1.1
> Interface                131.1.1.1
> Interface                133.1.1.1
> Interface                132.1.1.1
> Interface                191.1.1.1
> Interface                193.1.1.1
> Interface                192.1.1.1
> Interface                195.1.1.1
> Interface                194.1.1.1
> Interface                200.1.1.1
> Interface                223.1.1.1
> R1#
>
>
> 2010/10/8 Rob Routt Jr. (rrouttjr) <rrouttjr_at_cisco.com>
>
>> Correction "show ip aliases" is the correct command, but obviously alias
>> will work too! For some reason, I think there is another command that is
>> very helpful for seeing this info and might even b a hidden command, but
>> I cannot think of it atm.
>>
>> -R
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: nobody_at_groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody_at_groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
>> Rob Routt Jr. (rrouttjr)
>> Sent: Thursday, October 07, 2010 9:50 PM
>> To: Adam Booth; Jeferson Guardia
>> Cc: groupstudy
>> Subject: RE: Playing with PIPES
>>
>> You can also use "show ip alias" Then use notepad/replace as Adam
>> mentioned.
>>
>> Router#sh ip alias
>> Address Type             IP Address      Port
>> Interface                1.1.1.1
>> Interface                2.2.2.2
>>
>>
>> -Rob
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: nobody_at_groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody_at_groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
>> Adam Booth
>> Sent: Thursday, October 07, 2010 9:45 PM
>> To: Jeferson Guardia
>> Cc: groupstudy
>> Subject: Re: Playing with PIPES
>>
>> Hi Jeferson,
>>
>> If you type "show ip int bri | exclude unassigned" it would show only
>> interfaces that have IP addresses but  you would still see stuff like
>> "Loopback0                  1.1.1.1         YES manual up" for each line
>>
>> If you paste the output into notepad, you can hit control h and replace
>> "YES
>> manual up" with nothing which would remove that part and just manually
>> remove the interface designations.
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Adam
>>
>> On Fri, Oct 8, 2010 at 1:39 PM, Jeferson Guardia
>> <jefersonf_at_gmail.com>wrote:
>>
>> > Guys, anyone have any idea how can I only see the IPs when I have
>> something
>> > like this?
>> >
>> > R1#sh ip int br | sec IP-Address
>> > Interface                  IP-Address      OK? Method Status
>> > Protocol
>> > R1#sh ip int br
>> > Interface                  IP-Address      OK? Method Status
>> > Protocol
>> > FastEthernet0/0            10.1.12.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Serial0/0                  unassigned      YES NVRAM  administratively
>> down
>> > down
>> > FastEthernet0/1            unassigned      YES NVRAM  administratively
>> down
>> > down
>> > Serial0/1                  unassigned      YES NVRAM  administratively
>> down
>> > down
>> > Loopback0                  1.1.1.1         YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback1                  2.2.2.2         YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback3                  125.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback4                  128.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback5                  131.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback6                  191.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback7                  192.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback8                  195.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback9                  200.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback10                 223.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback11                 4.4.4.4         YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback12                 5.5.5.5         YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback13                 6.6.6.6         YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback14                 132.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback15                 133.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback16                 193.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > Loopback17                 194.1.1.1       YES manual up
>> > up
>> > R1#
>> >
>> >
>> > The idea is having an output with just the IP's, thus I can copy and
>> paste
>> > it quickly into a tcl script to verify connectivity when
>> redistributing or
>> > something.
>> >
>> > Rgs,
>> >
>> >
>> > Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>> >
>> >
>> _______________________________________________________________________
>> > Subscription information may be found at:
>> > http://www.groupstudy.com/list/CCIELab.html
>>
>>
>> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>>
>> _______________________________________________________________________
>> Subscription information may be found at:
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>>
>>
>> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>>
>> _______________________________________________________________________
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>
>
> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
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Received on Thu Oct 07 2010 - 21:34:16 ART
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