RTS DV-3400 Informations techniques

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Management and
Configuration Guide
www.procurve.com
ProCurve Switches
E.10.02 (Series 5300xl)
L.10.XX (Series 4200vl)
M.08.73 (Series 3400/6400cl)
6400cl
5300xl
4200vl
3400cl
Vue de la page 0
1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 579 580

Résumé du contenu

Page 1 - ProCurve Switches

Management andConfiguration Guidewww.procurve.comProCurve SwitchesE.10.02 (Series 5300xl)L.10.XX (Series 4200vl)M.08.73 (Series 3400/6400cl)6400cl5300

Page 2

CLI: Configuring IP Address, Gateway, and Time-To-Live (TTL) . . . . 8-6 Web: Configuring IP Addressing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 3 - Series 3400cl Switches

Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features Status Reporting Features Browser elements covered in this section include: The Overview

Page 4

Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features The Port Utilization and Status Displays The Port Utilization and Status displays show an ov

Page 5

Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features % Error Pkts Rx: All error packets received by the port. (This indicator is a reddish col

Page 6 - 3 Using the Menu Interface

Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features Figure 5-11. Display of Numerical Values for the Bar Port Status Port Status Indicators Leg

Page 7

Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features The Alert Log The web browser interface Alert Log, shown in the lower half of the screen, sh

Page 8

Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features Alert Types and Detailed Views As of April, 2004, the web browser interface generates the fo

Page 9 - 8 Configuring IP Addressing

Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features Figure 5-14.Example of Alert Log Detail View The Status Bar The Status Bar appears in the up

Page 10 - 9 Time Protocols

Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features The Status bar includes four objects: Status Indicator. Indicates, by icon, the severity

Page 11

Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features Setting Fault Detection Policy One of the powerful features in the web browser interface is

Page 12 - Switches

Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features To provide the most information on network problems in the Alert Log, the recommended sensit

Page 13 - 13 Port Trunking

Menu: Operation with Multiple SNTP Server Addresses Configured . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-28 SNT

Page 14 - Port Traffic Controls

Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features —This page left blank intentionally— 5-26

Page 15

6 Switch Memory and Configuration Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 16 - File Transfers

Switch Memory and Configuration Contents Using the Clear + Reset Button Combination To Reset the Switch to Its Default Configuration . . . . . . . .

Page 17

Switch Memory and Configuration Overview Overview This chapter describes: How switch memory manages configuration changes How the CLI implements

Page 18

Switch Memory and Configuration Overview of Configuration File Management Running Config File: Exists in volatile memory and controls switch operat

Page 19 - C Troubleshooting

Switch Memory and Configuration Overview of Configuration File Management “permanent”. When you are satisfied that the change is satisfactory, you can

Page 20 - D MAC Address Management

Switch Memory and Configuration Using the CLI To Implement Configuration Changes Using the CLI To Implement Configuration Changes The CLI offers these

Page 21 - Product Documentation

Switch Memory and Configuration Using the CLI To Implement Configuration Changes 3. Observe the switch’s performance with the new parameter settings

Page 22 - Feature Index

Switch Memory and Configuration Using the CLI To Implement Configuration Changes ProCurve(config)# interface e 1 disable Disables port 1 in the runnin

Page 23

Switch Memory and Configuration Using the Menu and Web Browser Interfaces To Implement Configuration Changes How To Reset the startup-config and runni

Page 24

12 Configuring PoE Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-10 Changing the PoE Port Priority Level . . . .

Page 25

Switch Memory and Configuration Using the Menu and Web Browser Interfaces To Implement Configuration Changes Note The only exception to this operatio

Page 26

Switch Memory and Configuration Using the Menu and Web Browser Interfaces To Implement Configuration Changes Rebooting from the Menu Interface Term

Page 27 - Getting Started

Switch Memory and Configuration Using the Menu and Web Browser Interfaces To Implement Configuration Changes If configuration changes requiring a rebo

Page 28 - Conventions

Switch Memory and Configuration Using Primary and Secondary Flash Image Options Using Primary and Secondary Flash Image Options The Series switches co

Page 29 - Command Prompts

Switch Memory and Configuration Using Primary and Secondary Flash Image Options For example, if the switch is using a software version of E.08.22 stor

Page 30 - Sources for More Information

Switch Memory and Configuration Using Primary and Secondary Flash Image Options Figure 6-8. Determining the Software Version in Primary and Secondary

Page 31

Switch Memory and Configuration Using Primary and Secondary Flash Image Options Local Switch Software Replacement and Removal This section describes c

Page 32

Switch Memory and Configuration Using Primary and Secondary Flash Image Options For example, to copy the image in secondary flash to primary flash: 1.

Page 33 - Online Help

Switch Memory and Configuration Using Primary and Secondary Flash Image Options 2. Then erase the software image in the selected flash (in this case,

Page 34 - Need Only a Quick Start?

Switch Memory and Configuration Using Primary and Secondary Flash Image Options Booting from Primary Flash. This command always boots the switch from

Page 35 - Network

General Operating Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12-14 Configuring the ACM on the Network . . . . .

Page 36

Switch Memory and Configuration Using Primary and Secondary Flash Image Options Using the Fastboot feature. The fastboot command allows a boot sequen

Page 37

Switch Memory and Configuration Using Primary and Secondary Flash Image Options Operating Notes Default Boot Source. The switch reboots from primary

Page 38

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches

Page 39

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Beginning with software release E.09.xx, the switch allows

Page 40 - Advantages of Using the CLI

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches General Operation Multiple Configuration Storage in the Swi

Page 41 - Interface

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches The result is that the startup-config file used to reboot t

Page 42

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Transitioning to Multiple Configuration Files If your 5300x

Page 43

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Listing and Displaying Startup-Config Files Command Page s

Page 44

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches — Continued from the previous page. — In the default confi

Page 45

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Displaying the Content of A Specific Startup-Config File Wi

Page 46

14 Trunk Group Operation Using LACP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13-18 Default Port Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 47 - Using the Menu Interface

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches You can use the following command to change the current pol

Page 48

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Overriding the Default Reboot Configuration Policy. This c

Page 49 - Command Line (CLI) option.)

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Renaming an Existing Startup-Config File Syntax: rename co

Page 50

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Figure 6-21. Example of Using One Startup-Config File for

Page 51

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Erasing a Startup-Config File You can erase any of the star

Page 52

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Figure 6-23 illustrates using erase config < filename &g

Page 53 - Main Menu Features

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches • Boots the switch from primary flash using the new (defau

Page 54

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Transferring Startup-Config Files To or From a Remote Serve

Page 55

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches For example, the following command copies a startup-config

Page 56

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches Operating Notes for Multiple Configuration Files SFTP/SC

Page 57

Configuring Jumbo Packet Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14-29 Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 58

Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files on 5300xl and 4200vl Switches —This page is intentionally unused— 6-40

Page 59

7 Interface Access and System Information Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 60 - Menu Features List

Interface Access and System Information Overview Overview This chapter describes how to: View and modify the configuration for switch interface acc

Page 61 - Where To Go From Here

Interface Access and System Information Interface Access: Console/Serial Link, Web, and Inbound Telnet Interface Access: Console/Serial Link, Web, and

Page 62

Interface Access and System Information Interface Access: Console/Serial Link, Web, and Inbound Telnet Menu: Modifying the Interface Access The menu i

Page 63

Interface Access and System Information Interface Access: Console/Serial Link, Web, and Inbound Telnet CLI: Modifying the Interface Access Interface A

Page 64 - Using the CLI

Interface Access and System Information Interface Access: Console/Serial Link, Web, and Inbound Telnet Outbound Telnet to Another Device. This featur

Page 65 - Privilege Levels at Logon

Interface Access and System Information Interface Access: Console/Serial Link, Web, and Inbound Telnet All console parameter changes except events req

Page 66 - Privilege Level Operation

Interface Access and System Information Denying Interface Access by Terminating Remote Management Sessions Denying Interface Access by Terminating Rem

Page 67 - Manager Privileges

Interface Access and System Information System Information System Information System Information Features Feature Default Menu CLI Web System Name

Page 68

A LLDP Operating Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-31 LLDP Data Management on the Series 3400cl an

Page 69 - How To Move Between Levels

Interface Access and System Information System Information Time Zone: The number of minutes your time zone location is to the West (+) or East (-) of

Page 70 - ? symbol lists the

Interface Access and System Information System Information 2. Press [E] (for Edit). The cursor moves to the System Name field. 3. Refer to the onlin

Page 71

Interface Access and System Information System Information Configure a System Name, Contact, and Location for the Switch. To help distinguish one swi

Page 72 - Listing Command Options

Interface Access and System Information System Information Reconfigure the MAC Age Time for Learned MAC Addresses. This command corresponds to the MA

Page 73 - Displaying CLI “Help”

Interface Access and System Information System Information Web: Configuring System Parameters In the web browser interface, you can enter the followin

Page 74 - Configuration Modes

8 Configuring IP Addressing Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 75

Configuring IP Addressing Overview Overview You can configure IP addressing through all of the switch’s interfaces. You can also: Easily edit a sw

Page 76

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration use the menu interface or the CLI to manually configure the initial IP values. After you have network acces

Page 77

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration Notes For more on using the Switch Setup screen, see the Installation and Getting Started Guide you receiv

Page 78

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration Menu: Configuring IP Address, Gateway, and Time-To-Live (TTL) Do one of the following: To manually enter

Page 79 - [Enter]). (The tilde

Menu: TFTP Download from a Server to Primary Flash . . . . . . . A-5 CLI: TFTP Download from a Server to Flash . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A-6

Page 80

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration 3. If the switch needs to access a router, for example, to reach off-subnet destinations, select the Defa

Page 81

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration (You can also use the show management command to display the IP addressing and time server IP addressing co

Page 82

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration Note The default IP address setting for the DEFAULT_VLAN is DHCP/Bootp. On additional VLANs you create, t

Page 83 - CLI Control and Editing

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration 1. Go to VLAN 20. 2. Configure two additional IP addresses on VLAN 20. 3. Display IP addressing. Figure 8-4

Page 84

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration Note Removing or Replacing IP Addresses in a Multinetted VLAN. To remove an IP address from a multinetted

Page 85

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration 3. If you need further information on using the web browser interface, click on [?] to access the web-base

Page 86

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration Note Note DHCP/Bootp Operation Overview. DHCP/Bootp is used to provide configuration data from a DHCP or

Page 87 - General Features

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration DHCP Operation. A significant difference between a DHCP configuration and a Bootp configuration is that an

Page 88 - Session with the Switch

Configuring IP Addressing IP Configuration An entry in the Bootp table file /etc/bootptab to tell the switch or VLAN where to obtain a configuration

Page 89 - ProCurve Manager Plus (PCM+)

Configuring IP Addressing IP Preserve: Retaining VLAN-1 IP Addressing Across Configuration File Downloads For DHCP operation: • A DHCP scope has b

Page 90 - Install Alert

B Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 91 - Interface Session

Configuring IP Addressing IP Preserve: Retaining VLAN-1 IP Addressing Across Configuration File Downloads Operating Rules for IP Preserve When ip pre

Page 92 - [Fault Detection] key.)

8-17 Configuring IP Addressing IP Preserve: Retaining VLAN-1 IP Addressing Across Configuration File Downloads For example, consider Figure 8-7: Figur

Page 93

Configuring IP Addressing IP Preserve: Retaining VLAN-1 IP Addressing Across Configuration File Downloads If you apply this configuration file to fig

Page 94 - If You Lose the Password

9 Time Protocols Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-2 Tim

Page 95 - The Help Button

Time Protocols Overview Overview This chapter describes: SNTP Time Protocol Operation Timep Time Protocol Operation Using time synchronization

Page 96 - Support/Mgmt URLs Feature

Time Protocols Selecting a Time Synchronization Protocol or Turning Off Time Protocol Operation SNTP Time Synchronization SNTP provides two operating

Page 97 - Support URL

Time Protocols Selecting a Time Synchronization Protocol or Turning Off Time Protocol Operation 3. Configure the remaining parameters for the time p

Page 98

Time Protocols SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring SNTP Feature Default Menu CLI Web view the SNTP

Page 99

Time Protocols SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring SNTP Parameter Operation Server Address Used only when the SNTP Mode is set to Unicast.

Page 100 - Status Reporting Features

Time Protocols SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring 4. Use the Space bar to select SNTP, then press [v] once to display and move to the SNTP M

Page 101 - Port Utilization

Interface Monitoring Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B-23 Menu: Configuring Port and Static Trunk Monitoring

Page 102

Time Protocols SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Note: The Menu interface lists only the highest priority SNTP server, even if others are c

Page 103 - Port Status

Time Protocols SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Viewing the Current SNTP Configuration Syntax: show sntp This command lists both the time

Page 104 - The Alert Log

Time Protocols SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Syntax: show management This command can help you to easily examine and compare the IP ad

Page 105

Time Protocols SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Syntax: sntp poll-interval < 30 - 720 > Enabling the SNTP mode also enables the SNTP

Page 106 - The Status Bar

Time Protocols SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring to three unicast servers. You can use the Menu interface or the CLI to configure one server

Page 107

Time Protocols SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring . In this example, the Poll Interval and the Protocol Version appear at their default set

Page 108

Time Protocols SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Disabling Time Synchronization Without Changing the SNTP Configuration. The recommended me

Page 109

Time Protocols SNTP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Even though the Time Sync Mode is set to Sntp, time synchronization is disabled because no

Page 110

Time Protocols TimeP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring TimeP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring TimeP Feature Default Menu CLI Web view the

Page 111 - Contents

Time Protocols TimeP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Menu: Viewing and Configuring TimeP To View, Enable, and Modify the TimeP Protocol: 1. Fr

Page 113 - Overview

Viewing the Debug Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C-40 Steps for Configuring Debug and Syslog Messaging . . .

Page 114

Time Protocols TimeP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring • Use the Space bar to select the Manual mode. i. Press [>] to move the cursor to the

Page 115

Time Protocols TimeP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Viewing the Current TimeP Configuration Using different show commands, you can display e

Page 116 - Configuration Changes

Time Protocols TimeP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Figure 9-15. Example of Display Showing IP Addressing for All Configured Time Servers a

Page 117

Time Protocols TimeP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Enabling TimeP in DHCP Mode. Because the switch provides a TimeP polling interval (default

Page 118

Time Protocols TimeP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Enabling Timep in Manual Mode. Like DHCP mode, configuring TimeP for Manual mode enables

Page 119 - Changes

Time Protocols TimeP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring Changing the TimeP Poll Interval. This command lets you specify how long the switch waits

Page 120

Time Protocols TimeP: Viewing, Selecting, and Configuring For example, if the switch is running TimeP in DHCP mode, no ip timep changes the TimeP c

Page 121

Time Protocols SNTP Unicast Time Polling with Multiple SNTP Servers SNTP Unicast Time Polling with Multiple SNTP Servers When running SNTP unicast tim

Page 122

Time Protocols SNTP Unicast Time Polling with Multiple SNTP Servers Displaying All SNTP Server Addresses Configured on the Switch The System Inform

Page 123 - Image Options

Time Protocols SNTP Unicast Time Polling with Multiple SNTP Servers Prioritized list of SNTP Server IP Addresses Figure 9-21. Example of SNTP Serv

Page 124 - The unequal code

Product Documentation About Your Switch Manual Set Note For the latest version of all ProCurve switch documentation, including Release Notes covering

Page 125 - Switch Software Downloads

Time Protocols SNTP Messages in the Event Log Menu: Operation with Multiple SNTP Server Addresses Configured When you use the Menu interface to confi

Page 126

10 Port Status and Basic Configuration Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 127 - No Undo!

Port Status and Basic Configuration Overview Overview Note On Connecting Transceivers to Fixed-Configuration Devices This chapter describes how to

Page 128 - Rebooting the Switch

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters Table 10-1. Status and Parameters for Each Port Type Status

Page 129

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters Status or Parameter Description — Continued From Previous

Page 130

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters Status or Parameter Description — Continued From Previous Pag

Page 131 - Operating Notes

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters Menu: Port Configuration From the menu interface, you can v

Page 132

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters Using the Menu To Configure Ports. Note The menu interface u

Page 133

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters CLI: Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters Po

Page 134 - General Operation

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters This screen shows current port operating status. Note: The (pe

Page 135

Product Documentation Feature Index For the manual set supporting your switch model, the following feature index indicates which manual to consult for

Page 136

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters Note that in the above syntax you can substitute an “int” f

Page 137 - Configuration Enabled

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters Enabling or Disabling Flow Control 3400cl/6400cl Switches:

Page 138

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters For example, suppose that: 1. You want to enable flow cont

Page 139 - Command Page

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters Disables per-port flow control on ports A5 and A6. Figure 10-8

Page 140

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters Configuring a Broadcast Limit on the Switch 3400cl/6400c

Page 141

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters For example, the following command enables broadcast limiting

Page 142

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters For more information on MDI-X, refer to the appendix titled

Page 143

Port Status and Basic Configuration Viewing Port Status and Configuring Port Parameters Syntax: show interfaces brief Where a port is linked to anoth

Page 144

Port Status and Basic Configuration Using Friendly (Optional) Port Names Note Upgrading the Switch Series 5300xl Operating System from E_07.XX or

Page 145

Port Status and Basic Configuration Using Friendly (Optional) Port Names Configuring and Operating Rules for Friendly Port Names At either the glob

Page 146

Product Documentation Feature Management and Configuration Advanced Traffic Management Access Security Guide Supported on 5300xl Supported on 4200vl

Page 147

Port Status and Basic Configuration Using Friendly (Optional) Port Names Configuring a Single Port Name. Suppose that you have connected port A3 o

Page 148 - Connected Host

Port Status and Basic Configuration Using Friendly (Optional) Port Names Displaying Friendly Port Names with Other Port Data You can display friendly

Page 149

Port Status and Basic Configuration Using Friendly (Optional) Port Names Port Without a “Friendly” Name Friendly port names assigned in previous ex

Page 150

Port Status and Basic Configuration Using Friendly (Optional) Port Names For a given port, if a friendly port name does not exist in the running-confi

Page 151

Port Status and Basic Configuration Using Friendly (Optional) Port Names — This page is intentionally unused. — 10-24

Page 152

11 Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Contents PoE Operation on the Series 5300xl Switches . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 153 - Web, and Inbound Telnet

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches PoE Operation on the Series 5300xl Switches PoE Operation on the Series 5300xl Swit

Page 154 - Parameters

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Introduction PoE Terminology Term Use in this Manual active PoE port A PoE-enable

Page 155

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Introduction Overview of Operation A J8161A xl PoE module is a PSE device that rece

Page 156

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches General PoE Operation For information on installing a ProCurve Switch xl PoE Mod

Page 157 - ■ Critical log events

Product Documentation Feature Management and Configuration Advanced Traffic Management Access Security Guide Supported on 5300xl Supported on 4200vl

Page 158 - Sessions

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches General PoE Operation Note The ports on a PoE module support standard networking l

Page 159 - System Information

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches General PoE Operation with 20 watts of PoE power remaining available on a module, y

Page 160

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches General PoE Operation Power Priority Operation When Does an xl PoE Module Prioritiz

Page 161

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches General PoE Operation Table 11-2. Example of PoE Priority Operation on an xl PoE M

Page 162

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring PoE Operation Configuring PoE Operation In the default configuration, P

Page 163 - (config)# time timezone -480

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring PoE Operation Disabling or Re-Enabling PoE Port Operation Syntax: [no]

Page 164 - [?] in the web

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring PoE Operation Syntax: power [slot < slot-identifier >] threshold

Page 165 - Configuring IP Addressing

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring PoE Operation 1. Use the walkmib pethPsePortType.< slot-# > comm

Page 166 - IP Configuration

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring PoE Operation Lists port numbers used by the MIB for slot “B”. MIB Desi

Page 167

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Viewing PoE Configuration and Status Viewing PoE Configuration and Status Displayi

Page 168

Product Documentation Feature Management and Configuration Advanced Traffic Management Access Security Guide Supported on 5300xl Supported on 4200vl

Page 169 - Live (TTL)

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Viewing PoE Configuration and Status Displaying an Overview of PoE Status on All Po

Page 170

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Viewing PoE Configuration and Status Ports C1 through C4 are delivering power. The

Page 171

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Viewing PoE Configuration and Status Syntax: show power-management < port-list

Page 172

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Planning and Implementing a PoE Configuration Planning and Implementing a PoE Confi

Page 173

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Planning and Implementing a PoE Configuration Applying Security Features to PoE Con

Page 174 - [IP Configuration]

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Planning and Implementing a PoE Configuration For more on this topic, refer to the

Page 175

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches Planning and Implementing a PoE Configuration enough unused power to meet the minim

Page 176 - DHCP/Bootp Operation

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches PoE Operating Notes PoE Operating Notes Simply disabling a PoE port does not aff

Page 177

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches PoE Operating Notes Slot < slot-id > POE usage is below configured threshold

Page 178 - ■ For Bootp operation:

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches PoE Operating Notes “Warning” PoE Event-Log Messages W < MM/DD/YY > < HH

Page 179 - Downloads

Product Documentation Feature Management and Configuration Advanced Traffic Management Access Security Guide Supported on 5300xl Supported on 4200vl

Page 180 - Enabling IP Preserve

Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 5300xl Switches PoE Operating Notes Port < port-id > PD Invalid Signature indication. The swi

Page 181

12 Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Contents Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 182

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Contents Configuration Context Command Syntax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12-24 Ac

Page 183 - Time Protocols

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Introduction Introduction The ProCurve Access Controller xl Module (ACM) enables secure, mo

Page 184

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Introduction • The ProCurve Networking Web site at www.procurve.com. (Click on Technical s

Page 185 - Operation

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Access Controller xl Module Overview Access Controller xl Module Overview The Access Contro

Page 186

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Access Controller xl Module Overview The Access Controller xl Module has no external ports,

Page 187 - Configuring

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Using 5300xl Features with the Access Controller xl Module 4. Configure downlink client po

Page 188

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Using 5300xl Features with the Access Controller xl Module Note 5300xl switch ports that a

Page 189

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Using 5300xl Features with the Access Controller xl Module Feature Explanation Uplink Port

Page 190

1 Getting Started Contents Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-2 Conv

Page 191

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Using 5300xl Features with the Access Controller xl Module Routing Infrastructure Support T

Page 192

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Using 5300xl Features with the Access Controller xl Module Figure 12-3. A Downlink Client P

Page 193

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Using 5300xl Features with the Access Controller xl Module The Role of VLANs VLANs are used

Page 194

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Using 5300xl Features with the Access Controller xl Module Downlink client ports must be me

Page 195

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches General Operating Rules General Operating Rules Uplink and downlink ports cannot be memb

Page 196

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring the ACM on the Network Note ‘ProCurve’ is used as a generic prompt for all 530

Page 197

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring the Access Controller xl Module Figure 12-4. Example of ACM Establishing Commun

Page 198

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring the Access Controller xl Module From the CLI command prompt at the global confi

Page 199 - – None

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring the Access Controller xl Module Notes on Creating Downlink Client Ports Dependi

Page 200

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring the Access Controller xl Module Configuring Client VLANs You may configure a cl

Page 201

Getting Started Introduction Introduction This Management and Configuration Guide is intended for use with the following switches: ProCurve Switch

Page 202 - Time Sync Method

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring the Access Controller xl Module ACM Configuration Commands Summary and Syntax C

Page 203

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring the Access Controller xl Module Syntax: [no] access-controller <slot-id>

Page 204

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring the Access Controller xl Module Syntax: [no] access-controller <slot-id>

Page 205

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Configuring the Access Controller xl Module Syntax: enable extended-commands Changes the C

Page 206

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Displaying Access Controller xl Status from the 5300xl CLI Displaying Access Controller xl

Page 207 - SNTP Servers

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Displaying Access Controller xl Status from the 5300xl CLI Configuration Context Command Sy

Page 208

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Displaying Access Controller xl Status from the 5300xl CLI Access Controller Context Comman

Page 209

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Managing the ACM Managing the ACM Once the module is installed and configured, most managem

Page 210 - Addresses Configured

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Managing the ACM Clear Commands Command clear accesscontrolserver clear dhcpserver clear dn

Page 211

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Managing the ACM Command set logopt level <critical | major | minor | trivial | never>

Page 212 - Port Parameters

Getting Started Conventions Command Syntax Statements Syntax: ip default-gateway < ip-addr > Syntax: show interfaces [port-list ] Vertical

Page 213 - — Continued —

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Managing the ACM show vpn Command terminal length <2..1000> terminal width <61…192

Page 214

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches Operating Notes Operating Notes Bridged protocols, such as Appletalk, are supported thro

Page 215

Access Controller xl Module for the Series 5300xl Switches BIOS POST Event Log Messages BIOS POST Event Log Messages If a critical BIOS power on self

Page 216 - Menu: Port Configuration

13 Port Trunking Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13-2 Port

Page 217

Port Trunking Overview Overview This chapter describes creating and modifying port trunk groups. This includes non-protocol trunks and LACP (802.3a

Page 218

Port Trunking Overview Port Connections and Configuration: All port trunk links must be point-to-point connections between a switch covered by this g

Page 219 - Configure Port Mode

Port Trunking Port Trunk Features and Operation Port Trunk Features and Operation The switches covered by this guide offer these options for port t

Page 220

Port Trunking Trunk Configuration Methods Fault Tolerance: If a link in a port trunk fails, the switch redistributes traffic originally destined for

Page 221

Port Trunking Trunk Configuration Methods Static Trunk: The switch uses the links you configure with the Port/Trunk Settings screen in the menu int

Page 222 - Enables global flow control

Port Trunking Trunk Configuration Methods Table 13-3. General Operating Rules for Port Trunks Media: For proper trunk operation, all ports on both en

Page 223

ProCurve Series 6400cl Switches Series 5300xl Switches Series 4200vl Switches Series 3400cl Switches October 2006 E.10.02 or Greater (5300xl) L.10.01

Page 224

Getting Started Sources for More Information Screen Simulations Displayed Text. Figures containing simulated screen text and command output look like

Page 225 - Configuring Auto-MDIX

Port Trunking Trunk Configuration Methods Spanning Tree: 802.1D (STP) and 802.1w (RSTP) Spanning Tree operate as a global setting on the switch (wi

Page 226 - ■ Manual MDI-X

Port Trunking Menu: Viewing and Configuring a Static Trunk Group Menu: Viewing and Configuring a Static Trunk Group Important Configure port trunking

Page 227 - Operating Mode

Port Trunking Menu: Viewing and Configuring a Static Trunk Group • For proper trunk operation, all ports in a trunk must have the same media type

Page 228

Port Trunking CLI: Viewing and Configuring Port Trunk Groups 7. When you are finished assigning ports to the trunk group, press [Enter], then [S] (fo

Page 229

Port Trunking CLI: Viewing and Configuring Port Trunk Groups Listing Static Trunk Type and Group for All Ports or for Selected Ports. Syntax: show

Page 230

Port Trunking CLI: Viewing and Configuring Port Trunk Groups Listing Static LACP and Dynamic LACP Trunk Data. Syntax: show lacp Lists data for only t

Page 231 - “Friendly”

Port Trunking CLI: Viewing and Configuring Port Trunk Groups Figure 13-9. Example of a Dynamic LACP Trunk with One Standby Link “Up” Links Standby

Page 232

Port Trunking CLI: Viewing and Configuring Port Trunk Groups The following examples show how to create different types of trunk groups. Configuring a

Page 233

Port Trunking CLI: Viewing and Configuring Port Trunk Groups Figure 13-10. Example of Criteria for Automatically Forming a Dynamic LACP Trunk Swit

Page 234

Port Trunking Web: Viewing Existing Port Trunk Groups Caution Unless spanning tree is running on your network, removing a port from a trunk can resul

Page 235

Getting Started Sources for More Information Note For the latest version of all ProCurve switch documentation, including Release Notes covering recen

Page 236 - Introduction

Port Trunking Trunk Group Operation Using LACP Trunk Group Operation Using LACP The switch can automatically configure a dynamic LACP trunk group o

Page 237 - PoE Terminology

Port Trunking Trunk Group Operation Using LACP Table 13-4. LACP Trunk Types LACP Port Trunk Configuration Operation Dynamic LACP This option automat

Page 238 - Related Publications

Port Trunking Trunk Group Operation Using LACP Static LACP Provides a manually configured, static LACP trunk to accommodate these conditions: LACP

Page 239 - General PoE Operation

Port Trunking Trunk Group Operation Using LACP Table 13-5. LACP Port Status Data Status Name Meaning Port Numb Shows the physical port number for e

Page 240 - PD Support

Port Trunking Trunk Group Operation Using LACP ProCurve(config)# aaa port-access authenticator b1 LACP has been disabled on 802.1x port(s). ProCurv

Page 241

Port Trunking Trunk Group Operation Using LACP Dynamic LACP Trunks. You can configure a port for LACP-active or LACP-passive, but on a dynamic LACP t

Page 242 - Power Priority Operation

Port Trunking Trunk Group Operation Using the “Trunk” Option A port configured as LACP passive and not assigned to a port trunk can be configured t

Page 243

Port Trunking How the Switch Lists Trunk Data How the Switch Lists Trunk Data Static Trunk Group: Appears in the menu interface and the output from th

Page 244 - Configuring PoE Operation

Port Trunking Outbound Traffic Distribution Across Trunked Links Manager Plus network management software to quickly and easily identify the source

Page 245

14 Port Traffic Controls Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

Page 246

Getting Started Sources for More Information Access Security Guide—Use the Access Security Guide for information on: • Local username and password

Page 247

Port Traffic Controls Contents Viewing the Current Jumbo Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14-29 Enabling or Disabling Jumbo Traffic on

Page 248

Port Traffic Controls Overview Overview Feature Default Menu CLI Web Rate-Limiting None n/a 14-4 n/a Guaranteed Minimum Per Queue: n/a 14-2

Page 249

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl

Page 250

Note for Rate-Limiting on Series 3400cl and 6400cl Switches Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches

Page 251 - • Detection Status:

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches For example, either of the following commands configures an

Page 252

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches Ports A3-A5 are configured with a rate limit of 60 %. (Port

Page 253

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches rate limit. In this case, the inbound traffic flow does not

Page 254

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches Network Stress Conditions: Under normal network operatin

Page 255 - (204 – 15.4) ≥ w

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches ICMP Rate-Limiting In IP networks, ICMP messages are genera

Page 256

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches Caution The ICMP protocol is necessary for routing, diagno

Page 257 - PoE Operating Notes

Getting Started Sources for More Information Figure 1-3. Listing of ProCurve Manuals on the ProCurve Networking Web Site Online Help If you need info

Page 258

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches 5300xl Switch 5300xl Switch 5300xl Switch Router Server Ba

Page 259

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches All ports belonging to a trunk configured for ICMP rate-

Page 260

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches Configuring Inbound Rate-Limiting. This command controls i

Page 261 - for the Series 5300xl

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches For example, if you wanted to view the rate-limiting config

Page 262

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches Ports B2-B5 are configured with an ICMP rate limit of 1%. T

Page 263

Note on Testing Rate-Limiting Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches The switch does not send more

Page 264 - Terminology

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches Interface Support: ICMP rate-limiting is available on al

Page 265 - Module Operation

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches tion, an outbound interface can become oversubscribed by tr

Page 266

Port Traffic Controls All-Traffic Rate-Limiting for the 5300xl, 3400cl and 6400cl Switches ProCurve# walkmib ifDescr ifDescr.1 = A1 ifDescr.2 = A2 ifD

Page 267 - Controller xl Module

Port Traffic Controls Guaranteed Minimum Bandwidth (GMB) on the Series 5300xl Switches Guaranteed Minimum Bandwidth (GMB) on the Series 5300xl Switche

Page 268

Getting Started Need Only a Quick Start? If you need information on specific features in the web browser interface, use the online help available for

Page 269

Port Traffic Controls Guaranteed Minimum Bandwidth (GMB) on the Series 5300xl Switches Table 14-1. Per-Port Outbound Priority Queues 802.1p Priority

Page 270

Port Traffic Controls Guaranteed Minimum Bandwidth (GMB) on the Series 5300xl Switches Note For a given port, when the demand on one or more outbound

Page 271

Port Traffic Controls Guaranteed Minimum Bandwidth (GMB) on the Series 5300xl Switches Syntax: [ no ] int < port-list > bandwidth-min output (C

Page 272 - Client VLANs

Port Traffic Controls Guaranteed Minimum Bandwidth (GMB) on the Series 5300xl Switches For example, suppose you wanted to configure the following outb

Page 273

Port Traffic Controls Guaranteed Minimum Bandwidth (GMB) on the Series 5300xl Switches For example, to display the GMB configuration resulting from ei

Page 274 - General Operating Rules

Port Traffic Controls Jumbo Packets on the Series 3400cl and Series 6400cl Switches Jumbo Packets on the Series 3400cl and Series 6400cl Switches This

Page 275

Port Traffic Controls Jumbo Packets on the Series 3400cl and Series 6400cl Switches Operating Rules Required Port Speed: The 3400cl/6400cl switches

Page 276

Port Traffic Controls Jumbo Packets on the Series 3400cl and Series 6400cl Switches Configuring Jumbo Packet Operation Command Page show vlans 14-30

Page 277

Port Traffic Controls Jumbo Packets on the Series 3400cl and Series 6400cl Switches Figure 14-8. Example Listing of Static VLANs To Show Jumbo Status

Page 278 - Changing the VLAN-Base

Port Traffic Controls Jumbo Packets on the Series 3400cl and Series 6400cl Switches Syntax: show vlans < vid > This command shows port membersh

Page 279 - Configuring Client VLANs

Getting Started To Set Up and Install the Switch in Your Network To Set Up and Install the Switch in Your Network Use the ProCurve Installation and Ge

Page 280

Port Traffic Controls Jumbo Packets on the Series 3400cl and Series 6400cl Switches Operating Notes for Jumbo Traffic-Handling ProCurve does not re

Page 281

Port Traffic Controls Jumbo Packets on the Series 3400cl and Series 6400cl Switches excluded from jumbo traffic. A solution is to create a third VLAN

Page 282

Port Traffic Controls Jumbo Packets on the Series 3400cl and Series 6400cl Switches Jumbo Traffic in a Switch Mesh Domain. Note that if a switch be

Page 283

15 Configuring for Network Management Applications Contents Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-3 Ove

Page 284

Configuring for Network Management Applications Contents LLDP Operating Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 285

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch Overview You can manage th

Page 286

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch SNMP Management Features SNMP management features on the switch

Page 287 - Managing the ACM

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch If you want to restrict access to one or more specific nodes, yo

Page 288

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch SNMP Version 3 Commands SNMP version 3 (SNMPv3) adds a new comma

Page 289

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch Enabling SNMPv3 The snmpv3 enable command starts a dialog that p

Page 290

Getting Started To Set Up and Install the Switch in Your Network — This page unused intentionally— 1-10

Page 291

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch 2. Assign users to Security Groups based on their security mode

Page 292 - BIOS POST Event Log Messages

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch SNMPv3 Commands Syntax: [no] snmpv3 user <user_name> Adds

Page 293 - Port Trunking

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch SNMPv3 Group Commands Syntax: [no] snmpv3 group This command as

Page 294

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch OperatorReadView – no access to icfSecurityMIB, hpSwitchIpTft

Page 295

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch Figure 15-4 shows the assigning of Operator community on MgrStat

Page 296

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch Caution For ProCurve Manager (PCM) version 1.5 or earlier (or a

Page 297 - Trunk Configuration Methods

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch If you are adding a community, the fields in this screen are bla

Page 298

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch This example lists the data for all communities in a switch; tha

Page 299

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch [restricted | unrestricted] Optionally assigns MIB access type.

Page 300

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch Syntax: [no] snmpv3 notify <notify_name> tag <tag_name

Page 301 - Trunk Group

2 Selecting a Management Interface Contents Selecting a Management Interface Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 302

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch [no] snmpv3 params <params_name> user <user_name> Ad

Page 303

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c Trap Features Feature Default Menu CLI We

Page 304

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch Using the CLI To List Current SNMP Trap Receivers. This command

Page 305

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch Syntax: snmp-server host < community-string > < ip-add

Page 306 - Standby Link

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch Notes To replace one community name with another for the same I

Page 307

Configuring for Network Management Applications Using SNMP Tools To Manage the Switch The RMON agent automatically runs in the switch. Use the RMON ma

Page 308

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) To standardize device discov

Page 309 - [Port Status]

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) LLDP (Link Layer Discovery Protocol): provides a standards-based

Page 310

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) LLDP: Link Layer Discovery Protocol: • 5300xl, 4200vl, and 6400c

Page 311

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) PSAP (Public Safety Answering Point): PSAPs are typically emerg

Page 312 - Default Port Operation

Selecting a Management Interface Overview Overview This chapter describes the following: Management interfaces for the switches covered by this gui

Page 313 - LACP Notes and Restrictions

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) An intervening hub or repeater forwards the LLDP packets it re

Page 314

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Receive only (rxonly): This setting enables a port to receive

Page 315

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Data Type Configuration Options Default Description System Desc

Page 316 - “Trunk” Option

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Using an SNMP application that is designed to query the Neighb

Page 317 - Trunked Links

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) You can override the default operation by configuring the port to

Page 318

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) neighbor, it stores this information as two separate entries if t

Page 319

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Command Page lldp enable-notification 15-41 lldpnotificationint

Page 320

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Note: This value corresponds to the lldp refresh-interval command

Page 321

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Displaying Port Configuration Details. This command displays the

Page 322

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) The blank IpAddress field indicates that the default IP address w

Page 323 - Rate-Limiting Operation

Selecting a Management Interface Advantages of Using the Menu Interface To use ProCurve Manager or ProCurve Manager Plus, refer to the Getting Started

Page 324

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Syntax [ no ] lldp run Enables or disables LLDP operation on the

Page 325

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) discarding it. The Time-to-Live value is the result of multiplyin

Page 326 - Rate-Limiting

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Syntax setmib lldpTxDelay.0 -i < 1 - 8192 > Uses setmib to

Page 327

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) delay interval delays the port’s ability to reinitialize and gene

Page 328 - ICMP Rate-Limiting

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Changing the Minimum Interval for Successive Data Change Notifica

Page 329

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Syntax lldp admin-status < port-list > < txonly | rxonl

Page 330

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Syntax [ no ] lldp config < port-list > ipAddrEnable <

Page 331

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Syntax: [ no ] lldp config < port-list > basicTlvEnable &l

Page 332

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Configuring Support for Port Speed and Duplex Advertisements on t

Page 333

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) LLDP-MED (Media-Endpoint-Discovery) for the 5300xl and 4200vl Swi

Page 334

© Copyright 2006 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change with-out notice. All Rights Reserved.

Page 335 - Note on Testing

Selecting a Management Interface Advantages of Using the CLI Offers out-of-band access (through the RS-232 connection) to the switch, so network bo

Page 336

IP Network Infrastructure(IEEE 802 LAN)IP Network Infrastructure(IEEE 802 LAN)IP Network Infrastructure(IEEE 802 LAN)Configuring for Network Managemen

Page 337

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) provide information on network connectivity capabilities (for

Page 338

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) LLDP-MED Topology Change Notification This optional feature provi

Page 339 - GMB Operation

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Note Topology change notifications provide one method for monito

Page 340

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Advertising Device Capability, Network Policy, PoE Status and Loc

Page 341 - Outbound Traffic

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) The voice VLAN port membership configured on the switch can be

Page 342

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Syntax: [ no ] lldp config < port-list > medTlvEnable <

Page 343

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) network-policy This TLV enables the switch port to advertise its

Page 344 - GMB Operating Notes

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) PoE Advertisements. These advertisements inform an LLDP-MED endp

Page 345 - Jumbo Packets on the Series

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) ELIN (Emergency Location Identification Number): an emergency

Page 346 - Operating Rules

Selecting a Management Interface Advantages of Using the Web Browser Interface Information on Using the CLI For information on how to use the CLI,

Page 347

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Syntax: [ no ] lldp config < port-list > medPortLocation &

Page 348

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) When an emergency call is placed from a properly configured class

Page 349

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) elin-addr < emergency-number > This feature is intended for

Page 350

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Example of a Location Configuration on a 5300xl Switch Port. Sup

Page 351

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Figure 15-15 shows the commands for configuring and displaying th

Page 352 - Troubleshooting

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Displaying Switch Information Available for Outbound Advertisemen

Page 353 - Applications

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) The Management Address field displays only the LLDP-configurable

Page 354

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) information on displaying the currently configured port speed and

Page 355

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Syntax show lldp info remote-device [ port-list ] Without the [

Page 356 - SNMP Management Features

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Note: In software releases earlier than M_08_06x (for the 3400cl

Page 357

Selecting a Management Interface Advantages of Using the Web Browser Interface Familiar browser interface--locations of window objects consistent w

Page 358 - SNMP Version 3 Commands

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Displaying LLDP Statistics LLDP statistics are available on both

Page 359 - SNMPv3 Users

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) — Continued from the preceding page. — Per-Port LLDP Counters: Nu

Page 360

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Counters showing frames sent on a port but no frames received on

Page 361

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) LLDP Packet Forwarding: An 802.1D-compliant switch does not forwa

Page 362 - Group Access Levels

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Figure 15-22. Matching Internal Port Numbers to External Slot/Po

Page 363 - SNMPv3 Communities

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) If the switch receives both LLDP and CDP advertisements on the

Page 364 - Two Operator Access Levels

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Protocol State Packet Generation Inbound Data Management Inboun

Page 365

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Command Page show cdp 15-75 show cdp neighbors [< port-list

Page 366

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Viewing the Switch’s Current CDP Neighbors Table. Devices are li

Page 367

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) Disabling CDP Operation. Disabling CDP operation clears the swit

Page 368

Selecting a Management Interface Advantages of Using ProCurve Manager or ProCurve Manager Plus Advantages of Using ProCurve Manager or ProCurve Manage

Page 369

Configuring for Network Management Applications LLDP (Link-Layer Discovery Protocol) —This page is intentionally unused— 15-78

Page 370

A File Transfers Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A-3 Downl

Page 371

File Transfers Contents Xmodem: Copying a Configuration File from a Serially Connected PC or UNIX Workstation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A-27 Cop

Page 372

File Transfers Overview Overview You can download new switch software, upload or download switch configu-ration files, and upload command files for co

Page 373

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software General Software Download Rules Switch software that you download via the menu interface always goes to

Page 374 - Advanced Management: RMON

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software Menu: TFTP Download from a Server to Primary Flash Note that the menu interface accesses only the primary f

Page 375

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software A “progress” bar indicates the progress of the download. When the entire software file has been received, a

Page 376

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software 1. Execute copy as shown below: Dynamic counter continually displays the number of bytes transferred. This

Page 377

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software Using Secure Copy and SFTP For some situations you may want to use a secure method to issue commands or cop

Page 378

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software Note SFTP over SSH version 1 (SSH v1) is not supported. A request from either the client or the switch (or

Page 379 - General LLDP Operation

Selecting a Management Interface Advantages of Using ProCurve Manager or ProCurve Manager Plus PCM and PCM+ enable greater control, uptime, and perfor

Page 380 - Configuration Options

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software The SCP/SFTP Process To use SCP and SFTP: 1. Open an SSH session as you normally would to establish a secu

Page 381

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software ProCurve(config)# ip ssh filetransfer Enabling SFTP automatically disables TFTP Tftp and auto-tftp have bee

Page 382

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software Enables/Disables TFTP. Note: If SFTP is enabled, this field will be set to No. You cannot use this field to

Page 383 - LLDP Operating Rules

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software Syntax: no tftp-enable This command disables all TFTP operation on the switch except for the auto-TFTP fea

Page 384

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software Authentication Switch memory allows up to ten public keys. This means the authentication and encryption key

Page 385 - Configuring LLDP Operation

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software The switch supports one SFTP session or one SCP session at a time. All files h

Page 386

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software Using Xmodem to Download Switch Software From a PC or UNIX Workstation This procedure assumes that: The

Page 387

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software 6. After the primary flash memory has been updated with the new software, you must reboot the switch to im

Page 388 - LLDP Advertisements”

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software c. In the Protocol field, select Xmodem. d. Click on the [Send] button. The download can take several min

Page 389

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software 1. From the switch console Main Menu in the switch to receive the down-load, select 7. Download OS screen.

Page 390

Selecting a Management Interface Advantages of Using ProCurve Manager or ProCurve Manager Plus • Device Software Updates: This feature automatically

Page 391

File Transfers Downloading Switch Software and Series 6400cl switches use software with the “M” identifier, such as M.08.01 and all of the Series 4200

Page 392

File Transfers Troubleshooting TFTP Downloads For example, to download a software file from secondary flash in a switch with an IP address of 10.28.22

Page 393

File Transfers Troubleshooting TFTP Downloads To find more information on the cause of a download failure, examine the messages in the switch’s Event

Page 394

File Transfers Transferring Switch Configurations and ACL Command Files Transferring Switch Configurations and ACL Command Files Transfer Features Fea

Page 395 - ■ Port ID (TLV)

File Transfers Transferring Switch Configurations and ACL Command Files For example, to download a configuration file named sw5300 in the configs dire

Page 396 - ■ system capabilities (TLV)

File Transfers Transferring Switch Configurations and ACL Command Files “Working Offline To Create or Edit an ACL” in the “Access Control Lists (ACLs)

Page 397 - TLV-Type >

File Transfers Transferring Switch Configurations and ACL Command Files To continue with the upload, press the [Y] key. To abort the upload, press the

Page 398

File Transfers Transferring Switch Configurations and ACL Command Files Xmodem: Copying a Configuration File from the Switch to a Serially Connected P

Page 399 - 5300xl and 4200vl Switches

File Transfers Transferring Switch Configurations and ACL Command Files Syntax: copy xmodem startup-config < pc | unix > copy xmodem config &l

Page 400

File Transfers Copying Diagnostic Data to a Remote Host, PC, or UNIX Workstation Copying Diagnostic Data to a Remote Host, PC, or UNIX Workstation You

Page 401

Selecting a Management Interface Advantages of Using ProCurve Manager or ProCurve Manager Plus — This page is intentionally unused. — 2-10

Page 402

File Transfers Copying Diagnostic Data to a Remote Host, PC, or UNIX Workstation Copying Event Log Output to a Destination Device Syntax: copy event-

Page 403 - LLDP-MED Fast Start Control

File Transfers Copying Diagnostic Data to a Remote Host, PC, or UNIX Workstation At this point, press [Enter] and start the Xmodem command sequence in

Page 404 - Status and Location Data

File Transfers Copying Diagnostic Data to a Remote Host, PC, or UNIX Workstation —This page is intentionally unused— A-32

Page 405

B Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 406

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Contents VLAN Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 407

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Overview Overview The switches covered by this guide have several built-in tools for monitoring, analyzing,

Page 408

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Status and Counters Data This section describes the status and counters screens ava

Page 409

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Menu Access To Status and Counters Beginning at the Main Menu, display the Status a

Page 410

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Figure B-2. Example of General Switch Information This screen dynamically indicat

Page 411

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Figure B-3. Example of Management Address Information with VLANs Configured This

Page 412

3 Using the Menu Interface Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 413

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Module Information Use this feature to determine which slots have modules installed

Page 414

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Port Status The web browser interface and the console interface show the same port

Page 415 - Advertisements

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Viewing Port and Trunk Group Statistics and Flow Control Status Feature Default M

Page 416

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Menu Access to Port and Trunk Statistics To access this screen from the Main Menu,

Page 417

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data CLI Access To Port and Trunk Group Statistics To Display the Port Counter Summary R

Page 418

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Viewing the Switch’s MAC Address Tables Feature Default Menu CLI Web viewing MA

Page 419 - (VoIP Telephone) Source

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Figure B-8. Example of the Address Table To page through the listing, use Next pa

Page 420 - Displaying LLDP Statistics

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Port-Level MAC Address Viewing and Searching. This feature displays and searches f

Page 421

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data CLI Access for MAC Address Views and Searches Syntax: show mac-address [ vlan <

Page 422 - LLDP Operating Notes

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) Information Menu Access to STP Data From the Main Menu

Page 423

Using the Menu Interface Overview Overview This chapter describes the following features: Overview of the Menu Interface (page 3-2) Starting and

Page 424 - LLDP and CDP Data Management

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Figure B-12. Example of STP Port Information CLI Access to STP Data This option li

Page 425

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) Status The switch uses the CLI to display

Page 426 - CDP Operation and Commands

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data VLAN Information The switch uses the CLI to display the following VLAN status: Show

Page 427

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Listing the VLAN ID (VID) and Status for Specific Ports. Because ports A1 and A2 ar

Page 428

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Status and Counters Data Web Browser Interface Status Information The “home” screen for the web browser inte

Page 429 - ■ show cdp displays

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Interface Monitoring Features Interface Monitoring Features Port Monitoring Features Feature Default Menu

Page 430

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Interface Monitoring Features Menu: Configuring Port and Static Trunk Monitoring This procedure describes c

Page 431

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Interface Monitoring Features Move the cursor to the Monitoring Port parameter. Inbound Port and Trunk Monit

Page 432

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Interface Monitoring Features ii. Use the Space bar to select the VLAN you want to monitor. iii. Go to ste

Page 433 - Downloading Switch Software

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Interface Monitoring Features Port receiving monitored traffic. Monitored Ports Figure B-20. Example of Mon

Page 434

Using the Menu Interface Starting and Ending a Menu Session Note If the switch has neither a Manager nor an Operator password, anyone having access t

Page 435

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Interface Monitoring Features Selecting or Removing Monitoring Source Interfaces. After you con-figure a mo

Page 436 - [Enter] to begin

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Interface Monitoring Features To monitor a VLAN: Configure monitoring of VLAN 20. Display current monitoring

Page 437

Monitoring and Analyzing Switch Operation Interface Monitoring Features — This page is intentionally unused. — B-30

Page 438 - Using Secure Copy and SFTP

C Troubleshooting Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C-3 Trou

Page 439 - How It Works

Troubleshooting Contents Debug Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C-36 Debug Destinations .

Page 440 - The SCP/SFTP Process

Troubleshooting Overview Overview This chapter addresses performance-related network problems that can be caused by topology, switch configuration, an

Page 441

Troubleshooting Troubleshooting Approaches Troubleshooting Approaches Use these approaches to diagnose switch problems: Check the ProCurve Networki

Page 442

Troubleshooting Browser or Telnet Access Problems Browser or Telnet Access Problems Cannot access the web browser interface: Access may be disabled

Page 443 - Command Options

Troubleshooting Browser or Telnet Access Problems Cannot Telnet into the switch console from a station on the network: Off subnet management statio

Page 444 - SCP/SFTP Operating Notes

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity Unusual Network Activity Network activity that fails to meet accepted norms may indicate a hardware problem w

Page 445

Contents Product Documentation About Your Switch Manual Set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xix Feature Index . . .

Page 446

Using the Menu Interface Starting and Ending a Menu Session How To Start a Menu Interface Session In its factory default configuration, the switch con

Page 447

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity This can also happen, for example, if the server is first configured to issue IP addresses with an unlimited

Page 448 - Switch-to-Switch Download

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity Indicates that routing is enabled; a require-ment for ACL operation. (There is an exception. See the Note, be

Page 449

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity Error (Invalid input) when entering an IP address. When using the “host” option in the command syntax, ensure

Page 450

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity DA or to use a wildcard ACL mask in a deny statement that happens to include the switch’s IP address. For an

Page 451

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity 30 Net IP: 30.29.16.1 (Deflt. Gateway) Router X 10 Net IP: 10.0.8.1 5300xl, 3400cl, or 6400cl Switch 10 Net

Page 452

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity IGMP-Related Problems IP Multicast (IGMP) Traffic That Is Directed By IGMP Does Not Reach IGMP Hosts or a Mul

Page 453 - ACL Command Files

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity Mesh-Related Problems Traffic on a dynamic VLAN does not get through the switch mesh . GVRP enables dynamic

Page 454

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity Port-Based Access Control (802.1x)-Related Problems Note To list the 802.1x port-access Event Log messages s

Page 455

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity The switch does not authenticate a client even though the RADIUS server is properly configured and providing

Page 456

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity Port A9 shows an “Open” status even though Access Control is set to Unauthorized (Force Auth). This is becaus

Page 457 - [Enter]

Using the Menu Interface Starting and Ending a Menu Session Stacking is available on Series 3400cl and Series 6400cl switches. Figure 3-1. Example of

Page 458

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity Also, ensure that the switch port used to access the RADIUS server is not blocked by an 802.1x configuration

Page 459

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity Ensure that the radius-server timeout period is long enough for network conditions. Verify that the swi

Page 460

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity Broadcast Storms Appearing in the Network. This can occur when there are physical loops (redundant links) i

Page 461

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity Executing IP SSH does not enable SSH on the switch. The switch does not have a host key. Verify by executing

Page 462

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity TACACS-Related Problems Event Log. When troubleshooting TACACS+ operation, check the switch’s Event Log for

Page 463

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity The encryption key configured in the server does not match the encryption key configured in the switch (by

Page 464

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity TimeP, SNTP, or Gateway Problems The Switch Cannot Find the Time Server or the Configured Gateway . TimeP, SN

Page 465

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity Switch “Y” Switch “X” Link supporting VLAN_1 and VLAN_2 Port X-3 Port Y- 7 VLAN Port Assignment VLAN Port Ass

Page 466 - Status and Counters Data

Troubleshooting Unusual Network Activity MAC Address “A”; VLAN 1Server VLAN 1 MAC Address “A”; VLAN 2 Switch with 3400cl, or 6400cl 5300xl, 4200vl,

Page 467 - General System Information

I Troubleshooting Using the Event Log To Identify Problem Sources Using the Event Log To Identify Problem Sources The Event Log records operating

Page 468 - Menu Access

Using the Menu Interface Starting and Ending a Menu Session Asterisk indicates a configuration change that requires a reboot to activate. Stacking is

Page 469

Troubleshooting Using the Event Log To Identify Problem Sources Table C-1. Event Log System Modules Module Event Description Module Event Descript

Page 470 - Module Information

Troubleshooting Using the Event Log To Identify Problem Sources Menu: Entering and Navigating in the Event Log From the Main Menu, select Event Log.

Page 471

Troubleshooting Using the Event Log To Identify Problem Sources CLI: Listing Events Syntax: show logging [-a] [<search-text>] Uses the CLI to li

Page 472 - Control Status

Troubleshooting Using the Event Log To Identify Problem Sources Reducing Duplicate Event Log and SNMP Trap Messages Note This feature is available wi

Page 473

C-32 Troubleshooting Using the Event Log To Identify Problem Sources If PIM operation caused the same event to occur six more times during the initial

Page 474 - Statistics

Troubleshooting Using the Event Log To Identify Problem Sources These two messages report separate events involving separate log throttle periods and

Page 475

Troubleshooting Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation The switch’s Event Log records switch-level progress, status

Page 476 - [Enter]. The address

Troubleshooting Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation Debug logging requires a logging destination (Syslog server and/or a session type), and involves

Page 477 - Prompt for Selecting

Troubleshooting Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation Note Using the logging < dest-ip-addr > command to configure a Syslog server address creat

Page 478

Troubleshooting Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation Syntax: [no] debug < debug-type > (Continued) ip [ ospf < adj | event | flood | lsa-ge

Page 479 - Menu Access to STP Data

Using the Menu Interface Main Menu Features Main Menu Features Figure 3-3. The Main Menu View with Manager Privileges The Main Menu gives you access

Page 480 - CLI Access to STP Data

Troubleshooting Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation Debug Destinations Debug enables you to disable and re-enable Syslog messaging to configured serv

Page 481

Troubleshooting Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation Syslog Operation Syslog is a client-server logging tool that allows a client switch to send event

Page 482 - VLAN Information

Troubleshooting Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation Syntax: [no] logging facility < facility-name > The logging facility specifies the destina

Page 483

Troubleshooting Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation Using this command when there are no Syslog server IP addresses already configured enables both d

Page 484

Troubleshooting Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation Example: Suppose that there are no Syslog servers configured on the switch (the default). Configu

Page 485

Troubleshooting Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation Example. Suppose that you want to: Configure Syslog logging of ACL and IP-OSPF packet message

Page 486 - [Y]) to select Yes

Troubleshooting Debug and Syslog Messaging Operation Operating Notes for Debug and Syslog Rebooting the Switch or pressing the Reset button resets

Page 487 - Use the Space bar to

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools Diagnostic Tools Diagnostic Features Feature Default Menu CLI Web Port Auto negotiation n/a n/a n/a n/a Ping

Page 488 - Monitoring

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools Not e To respond to a Ping test or a Link test, the device you are trying to reach must be IEEE 802.3-compliant. Pin

Page 489 - Monitored Ports

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools Web: Executing Ping or Link Tests 4. For a Ping test, enter the IP address of the target device. For a Link test, ent

Page 490

Using the Menu Interface Main Menu Features Command Line (CLI): Selects the Command Line Interface at the same level (Manager or Operator) that you

Page 491

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools Number of Packets to Send is the number of times you want the switch to attempt to test a connection. Timeout in Seco

Page 492

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools Link Tests. You can issue single or multiple link tests with varying repeti-tions and timeout periods. The defaults

Page 493

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools Displaying the Configuration File The complete switch configuration is contained in a file that you can browse from e

Page 494

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools IP routes Status and counters — VLAN information GVRP support Load balancing (trunk and LACP) Syntax: sh

Page 495

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools 3. Click [Start] to create and open the text file. 4. Execute show tech: ProCurve# show tech a. Each time the resu

Page 496 - Troubleshooting Approaches

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools Syntax: show version [no] page Toggles the paging mode for display commands between continuous listing and per-page l

Page 497

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools [minttl < 1-255 >] For the current instance of traceroute, changes the minimum number of hops allowed for each

Page 498

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools Intermediate router hops with the time taken for the switch to receive acknowledgement of each probe reaching each ro

Page 499 - Unusual Network Activity

Troubleshooting Diagnostic Tools Executing traceroute where the route becomes blocked or otherwise fails results in an output marked by timeouts for a

Page 500 - ACL Problems

Troubleshooting Restoring the Factory-Default Configuration Restoring the Factory-Default Configuration As part of your troubleshooting process, it ma

Page 501

Using the Menu Interface Screen Structure and Navigation Screen Structure and Navigation Menu interface screens include these three elements: Param

Page 502

Troubleshooting Restoring a Flash Image 2. Continue to press the Clear button while releasing the Reset button. 3. When the Self Test LED begins to

Page 503

Troubleshooting Restoring a Flash Image 3. Use the Reset button to reset the switch. The following prompt should then appear in the terminal emulator

Page 504

Troubleshooting Restoring a Flash Image Figure C-26. Example of Xmodem Download in Progress 8. When the download completes, the switch reboots from p

Page 505 - LACP-Related Problems

D MAC Address Management Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D

Page 506 - Mesh-Related Problems

MAC Address Management Overview Overview The switch assigns MAC addresses in these areas: For management functions, one Base MAC address is assigne

Page 507

MAC Address Management Determining MAC Addresses Determining MAC Addresses MAC Address Viewing Methods Feature Default Menu CLI Web view switch’s

Page 508

MAC Address Management Determining MAC Addresses Menu: Viewing the Switch’s MAC Addresses The Management Address Information screen lists the MAC addr

Page 509

MAC Address Management Determining MAC Addresses CLI: Viewing the Port and VLAN MAC Addresses The MAC address assigned to each switch port is used int

Page 510 - Radius-Related Problems

MAC Address Management Determining MAC Addresses (The above command is not case-sensitive.) For example, with a 4-port module in slot A of a 5304xl sw

Page 511 - Problems

MAC Address Management Determining MAC Addresses ifPhysAddress.102 Base MAC Address (MAC Address for default VLAN; VID = 1) ifPhysAddress.1 - 24: Po

Page 512 - SSH-Related Problems

Using the Menu Interface Screen Structure and Navigation Table 3-1. How To Navigate in the Menu Interface Task: Actions: Execute an action from the

Page 513

MAC Address Management Viewing the MAC Addresses of Connected Devices Viewing the MAC Addresses of Connected Devices Syntax: show mac-address [ | mac-

Page 514 - TACACS-Related Problems

E Daylight Savings Time on ProCurve Switches This information applies to the following ProCurve switches: • 212M • Series 2500 •6108 • 224M • Seri

Page 515

Daylight Savings Time on ProCurve Switches Middle Europe and Portugal: • Begin DST at 2am the first Sunday on or after March 25th. • End DST at 2am

Page 516 - VLAN-Related Problems

Daylight Savings Time on ProCurve Switches Before configuring a “User defined” Daylight Time Rule, it is important to understand how the switch treats

Page 517

Daylight Savings Time on ProCurve Switches — This page is intentionally unused. — E-4

Page 518 - Problem: This switch detects

Index Symbols => prompt … C-58 Numerics 802.1x LLDP blocked … 15-32 802.1X effect, LLDP … 15-71 A access manager … 15-12 operator … 15-12 Access Co

Page 519 - Sources

broadcast traffic, IPX … 10-5, 10-14 browser interface See web browser interface. C CDP configuration, viewing … 15-75 data collection … 15-73 default

Page 520

running-config file … 6-25 running-config file operation … 6-24 secondary boot path … 6-27 sftp/scp transfer … 6-39 show config file content … 6-29 sh

Page 521 - Log Status Line

excessive packets … 14-34 F factory default configuration restoring … 6-9, C-57 failure, switch software download … A-22 fault detection … 5-8 fault d

Page 522 - CLI: Listing Events

for SNMP management … 15-3 multiple in a VLAN … 8-8 removing or replacing … 8-10 IP preserve DHCP server … 8-16 overview … 8-15 rules, operating … 8-1

Page 523 - Messages

Using the Menu Interface Screen Structure and Navigation To get Help on individual parameter descriptions. In most screens there is a Help option in

Page 524

default configuration … 15-33 DHCP/Bootp operation … 15-32 disable, per-port … 15-42 display neighbor data … 15-65 ELIN … 15-25 enable/disable, global

Page 525

See port trunk. logging, command … C-36 logical port … 13-8 loop, network … 13-3 lost password … 5-10 M MAC address … 8-13, B-6, D-2 displaying detect

Page 526 - ■ Up to six Syslog servers

delete … 3-7, 5-10 if you lose the password … 5-10 lost … 5-10 manager … 5-8 operator … 5-8 set … 3-7 setting … 5-9 using to access browser and consol

Page 527 - Debug Command Operation

link requirements … 13-3 logical port … 13-8 media requirements … 13-7 media type … 13-3 menu access to static trunk … 13-9 monitor port restrictions

Page 528 - Debug Types

RFC2863 … 15-31 RIP debug command … C-37 RIP broadcast traffic, broadcast traffic, RIP … 10-5, 10-14 RMON … 15-4 RMON groups supported … 15-22 router

Page 529

viewing … 9-5, 9-9 software See switch software. software image See switch software. software version … B-6 sorting alert log entries … 5-20 source-po

Page 530 - Debug Destinations

viewing, CLI … 9-19 timesync, disabling … 9-23 Time-To-Live … 8-3, 8-5, 8-6, 8-10 See also TTL. time-to-live, LLDP … 15-28 Time-To-Live, on primary VL

Page 531 - Syslog Operation

MAC address … D-2, D-5 management and jumbo packets … 14-32 management VLAN, SNMP block … 15-3 monitoring … B-3, B-23 multinet … 8-3 multinetting … 8-

Page 532

—This page is intentionally unused— 14 – Index

Page 534

Using the Menu Interface Rebooting the Switch Rebooting the Switch Rebooting the switch from the menu interface Terminates all current sessions and

Page 535

Technical information in this documentis subject to change without notice.© Copyright 2006Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.Reproduction, adap

Page 536

Using the Menu Interface Rebooting the Switch Rebooting To Activate Configuration Changes. Configuration changes for most parameters in the menu inte

Page 537 - Diagnostic Tools

Advantages of Using the CLI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-4 General Benefits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 538

Using the Menu Interface Menu Features List Menu Features List Status and Counters • General System Information • Switch Management Address Informat

Page 539

Using the Menu Interface Where To Go From Here Where To Go From Here This chapter provides an overview of the menu interface and how to use it. The fo

Page 540 - CLI: Ping or Link Tests

Using the Menu Interface Where To Go From Here — This page is intentionally unused. — 3-16

Page 541

4 Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 542 - [Configuration Report]

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Overview Overview The CLI is a text-based command interface for configuring and monitoring the switch. The CLI

Page 543 - ■ GVRP support

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI When you use the CLI to make a configuration change, the switch writes the change to the Running-

Page 544

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI Caution ProCurve strongly recommends that you configure a Manager password. If a Manager passwor

Page 545 - Traceroute Command

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI Manager Privileges Manager privileges give you three additional levels of access: Manager, Global

Page 546

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI Table 4-1. Privilege Level Hierarchy Privilege Level Example of Prompt and Permitted Operations

Page 547

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI How To Move Between Levels Change in Levels Example of Prompt, Command, and Result Operator leve

Page 548

Displaying CLI “Help” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-11 Configuration Commands and the Context Confi

Page 549

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI For example, if you use the menu interface to configure an IP address of “X” for VLAN 1 and later

Page 550 - Restoring a Flash Image

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI Typing ? at the Manager level produces this listing: When - - MORE - - appears, use the Space bar

Page 551

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI As mentioned above, if you type part of a command word and press [Tab], the CLI completes the cur

Page 552

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI Displaying CLI “Help” CLI Help provides two types of context-sensitive information: Command li

Page 553 - MAC Address Management

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI Figure 4-7.Example of How To Display Help for a Specific Command Note that trying to list the hel

Page 554

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI Commands executed at configuration level for entering port and trk1 static trunk-group contexts,

Page 555 - Determining MAC Addresses

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI VLAN Context . Includes VLAN-specific commands that apply only to the selected VLAN, plus Manage

Page 556

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI Configuring Custom Login Banners for the Console and Web Browser Interfaces You can now configure

Page 557

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI Banner Operation with Telnet, Serial, or SSHv2 Access When a system operator begins a login sessi

Page 558

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI < banner-text-string > The switch allows up to 320 banner characters, including blank space

Page 559

Port Utilization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-17 Port Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 560 - Connected Devices

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI ProCurve(config)# show banner motd Banner Information Banner status: Enabled Configured Banner:

Page 561 - ■ Western Europe

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI The next time someone logs onto the switch’s management CLI, the following appears: The login scr

Page 562

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) Using the CLI If the switch is configured with ssh version 1 or ssh version 1-or-2, configuring the banner s

Page 563

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) CLI Control and Editing CLI Control and Editing Keystrokes Function [Ctrl] [A] Jumps to the first character o

Page 564

Using the Command Line Interface (CLI) CLI Control and Editing —This page is intentionally unused— 4-22

Page 565 - Numerics

5 Using the Web Browser Interface Contents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page 566 - 2 – Index

Using the Web Browser Interface Overview Overview The web browser interface built into the switch lets you easily access the switch from a browser-bas

Page 567 - Index – 3

Using the Web Browser Interface General Features General Features The Web Browser Interface includes these features: Switch Identity and Status: • Ge

Page 568 - 4 – Index

Using the Web Browser Interface Starting an Web Browser Interface Session with the Switch Starting an Web Browser Interface Session with the Switch Yo

Page 569 - Index – 5

Using the Web Browser Interface Starting an Web Browser Interface Session with the Switch Using ProCurve Manager (PCM) or ProCurve Manager Plus (PCM+)

Page 570 - 6 – Index

Renaming an Existing Startup-Config File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-32 Using the Clear + Reset Button Combination To Reset Xmodem: Copying

Page 571 - Index – 7

Using the Web Browser Interface Starting an Web Browser Interface Session with the Switch Alert Log First-Time Install Alert Figure 5-1. Example of St

Page 572 - 8 – Index

Using the Web Browser Interface Tasks for Your First Web Browser Interface Session Tasks for Your First Web Browser Interface Session The first time y

Page 573 - Index – 9

Using the Web Browser Interface Tasks for Your First Web Browser Interface Session This window is the launching point for the basic configuration you

Page 574 - 10 – Index

Using the Web Browser Interface Tasks for Your First Web Browser Interface Session Figure 5-3. The Device Passwords Window To set the passwords: 1.

Page 575 - Index – 11

Using the Web Browser Interface Tasks for Your First Web Browser Interface Session Entering a User Name and Password Figure 5-4. Example of the Passw

Page 576 - 12 – Index

Using the Web Browser Interface Tasks for Your First Web Browser Interface Session The Clear button is provided for your convenience, but its presence

Page 577 - Index – 13

Using the Web Browser Interface Support/Mgmt URLs Feature Support/Mgmt URLs Feature The Support/Mgmt URLs window enables you to change the World Wide

Page 578 - 14 – Index

Using the Web Browser Interface Support/Mgmt URLs Feature Support URL This is the site the switch accesses when you click on the Support tab on the we

Page 579

Using the Web Browser Interface Support/Mgmt URLs Feature In the default configuration, the switch uses the URL for accessing the web browser interfac

Page 580 - 5990-6050

Using the Web Browser Interface Support/Mgmt URLs Feature } You will enter the IP address for your PCM server. 8040 is the standard port number to use

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