Manuel d’utilisation 3Com 2500

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Summary
  • 3Com 2500 - page 1

    ® LAN PLEX ® 2500 E XTENDED S WITCHING U SER G UIDE Part No. 801-00343-000 Published November 1996 Revision 02 ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 2

    3Com Corporation ■ 5400 Bayfront Plaza ■ Santa Clara, California ■ 95052-8145 © 3Com Corporation, 1996. All rights reser ved . No part of this documentation may be reproduced in any form or by any means or used to make any derivative w ork (such as translation, transformation, or adaptation) without permission from 3Com Corporation. 3Com Cor ...

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    C ONTENTS A BOUT T HIS G UIDE Introduction 1 How to Use This Guide 1 Conv entions 2 LANplex 2500 Documentation 3 Documentation Comments 5 P ART IG ETTING S TARTED 1 LAN PLEX ® E XTENDED S WITCHING F EATURES About LANplex Extended Switching 1-1 Using Menus 1-2 Bridge Menu 1-3 IP Menu 1-4 IPX Menu 1-5 Appletalk Menu 1-6 P ART II V IRTUAL LAN T ECHNO ...

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    Modifying the Default VLAN 2-5 How the LANplex® System Makes Flooding Decisions 2-5 VLAN Exception F looding 2-6 Overlapped IP VLANs 2-7 Routing Between VLANs 2-8 VLAN Examples 2-10 Example 1 2-10 Example 2 2-11 P ART III A BOUT R OUTING P ROTOCOLS 3 B RIDGING AND R OUTING IN THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM What Is Routing? 3-1 LANplex in a Subnetworked E ...

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    5 R OUTING WITH IP M ULTICAST About IP Multicast Routing 5-1 IGMP 5-1 DVMRP 5-2 The MBONE 5-2 Multicast Routing Algorithms 5-3 Flooding 5-3 Spanning T rees 5-3 Reverse P ath Forwarding 5-4 Pruning 5-5 Multicast Inter faces 5-5 DVMRP Metric V alue 5-5 Time-T o-Live ( T TL) Threshold 5-5 Rate Limit 5-6 Multicast T unnels 5-6 6 R OUTING WITH IPX IPX R ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 6

    7 R OUTING IN AN A PPLE T ALK ® E NVIRONMENT About AppleT alk® 7-1 AppleT alk® Net work Elements 7-1 AppleT alk® Networks 7-2 AppleT alk® Nodes 7-2 Named Entities 7-2 AppleT alk® Zones 7-3 Seed Routers 7-4 AppleT alk Protocols 7-4 Physical Connectivity 7-5 The Datagram Delivery Protocol (DDP) 7-6 End-to-End Ser vices 7-6 T ransport Layer Prot ...

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    Defining a Static Route 9-11 Removing a Route 9-12 Flushing a Route 9-12 Setting the Default Route 9-12 Removing the Default Route 9-13 Administering the ARP Cache 9-13 Displaying the ARP Cache 9-14 Removing an ARP Cache Entr y 9-14 Flushing the ARP Cache 9-15 Administering A TM ARP Ser vers 9-15 Displaying A TM ARP Ser vers 9-15 Defining an A TM ...

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    Displaying Routes 10-8 Displaying the Multicast Cache 10-9 11 A DMINISTERING IPX R OUTING Administering Interfaces 11-2 Displaying IPX Interfaces 11-3 Defining an IPX Inter face 11-3 Modifying an Inter face 11-4 Removing an Inter face 11-4 Administering Routes 11-5 Displaying the Routing T able 11-6 Defining a Static Route 11-6 Removing a Route 1 ...

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    Configuring F or warding 12-11 Configuring Checksum 12-12 Pinging an AppleT alk Node 12-12 Viewing Appletalk Statistics 12-13 Displaying DDP Statistics 12-13 Displaying RTMP Information 12-14 Displaying ZIP Information 12-15 Displaying NBP Information 12-17 P ART VR EMOTE M ONITORING (RMON) AND THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM 13 R EMOTE M ONITORING (RMON ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 10

    Support from 3Com A-4 Returning Products for Repair A-4 I NDEX ...

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    A BOUT T HIS G UIDE Introduction The L ANplex® 2500 Extended Switching User Guide provides information about the features included with the LANplex Extended Switching software. These features include IP , IP Multicast, classical IP over A TM, IPX, and AppleT alk routing, virtual LAN ( VLAN) configuration, and remote monitoring (RMON). Use this gu ...

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    2 A BOUT T HIS G UIDE C onv entions T able 1 and T able 2 list conventions that are used thr oughout this guide. IPX routing and its protocols Chapter 6 AppleTalk routing, network elements, and protocols Chapter 7 How to administer VLANs Chapter 8 How to administer IP routing Chapter 9 How to administer IP mulitcast routing Chapter 10 How to admini ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 13

    LANplex 2500 Documentation 3 LANplex 2500 Documentation The f ollowing documents comprise the LANplex 2500 documentation set. If you want to order a document that y ou do not have or order additional documents, contact your sales representative f or assistance. ■ LANplex® 2500 Unpacking Instructions Describe how to unpack your LANplex system. It ...

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    4 A BOUT T HIS G UIDE ■ LANplex® 2500 Sof tware Release Notes Pr ovide information about the software release , including new features and bug fixes. I t also pro vides information about any changes to the LANplex system ’ s documentation. (Shipped with system) ■ LANplex® 2500 Getting Star ted Describes all the procedures necessary for ins ...

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    Documentation Comments 5 ■ Module Installation Guides Pr ovide an overview , installation instruc tions , LED status information, and pin-out information for the particular option module. (Shipped with individ- ual modules) Documentation C omments Y our suggestions are ver y important to us and will help make our documentation more useful to you. ...

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    6 A BOUT T HIS G UIDE ...

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    1 LAN PLEX ® E XTENDED S WITCHING F EATURES This chapter provides an o ver view of the Extended Switching software, and describes the enhanced Administration Console menus . About LANplex Extended Switching The LANplex Extended Switching soft ware replaces y our existing LANplex software and adds new functionalit y to y our system. Extended Switch ...

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    1-2 C HAPTER 1: LAN PLEX ® E XTENDED S WITCHING F EATURES Using Menus When you gain access to the Administration C onsole, the top-level menu appears. The Ex tended Switching software contains top-level menus and additions to the Bridge and IP menu options not available with Int elligent Switching software: Menu options: -------------------------- ...

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    Using Menus 1-3 Bridge Menu F rom the bridge menu, you can view information about and configur e Ethernet LANs, including VLANs. Figur e 1-1 shows the bridge menu. Figur e 1-1 Bridge Menu Hierarchy Top-Level Menu bridge menu interface menu system display summary ethernet mode detail fddi ipFragmentation define atm ipxSnapTranslation modify ➧ bri ...

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    1-4 C HAPTER 1: LAN PLEX ® E XTENDED S WITCHING F EATURES IP Menu F rom the ip menu, you can view information about and configure Internet Protocol (IP) interfaces and routes as well as IP Multicast routing . Y ou can administer the Address Resolution P rotocol (ARP), the Routing Information Protocol (RIP), UDP Helper , IP F or warding , and ping ...

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    Using Menus 1-5 IPX Menu F rom the ipx menu, you can view information about and configure Internet P ack et Exchange (IPX) interfaces, routes, and servers. Y ou can also administer the Routing Information P rotocol (RIP), Enhanced RIP mode, Ser vice A dver tising P rotocol (SAP), and statistics. F igure 1-3 shows the IPX menu. F or example, to de? ...

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    1-6 C HAPTER 1: LAN PLEX ® E XTENDED S WITCHING F EATURES Appletalk Menu F rom the appletalk menu, you can view information about and configur e Appletalk inter faces , routes, and zones. Y ou can also administer the Appletalk Address Resolution P rotocol (AARP), AppleT alk for warding , and statistics. F igure 1-4 shows the Appletalk menu. For e ...

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    2 VLAN S ON THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM This chapter contains: ■ A description of Vir tual LAN ( VLAN) concepts and their operational aspects in the LANplex® 2500 system ■ Examples of VLAN configurations About VLANs The VLAN concept in LAN technology helps minimize broadcast and multicast traffic. It also makes end-station moves, adds, and chang ...

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    2-2 C HAPTER 2: VLAN S ON THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM the data contained in the frames. P or t groups ar e useful when traffic patterns are known to be directly associated with par ticular ports. They can benefit the user by restricting traffic based on a set of simple rules. MA C Address Group VLANS VLANs allow a switch to make filtering decisions ...

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    About VLANs 2-3 layer 3 subnet address inf ormation. Protocol-sensitive VLANs allow the restriction of flood traffic for both routable and nonroutable protocols . They have a relativ ely simple configuration comprising one or more protocols and groups of switch ports. These protocol-sensitive VLANs operate independent of each other . Additionall ...

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    2-4 C HAPTER 2: VLAN S ON THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM Switch P or ts A group of switch ports is any combination of switch por ts on the LANplex system. Included are switch ports created as A TM LAN Emulation Clients (A TM LECs). VLANs do not suppor t media implementations that do not run over switch (bridge) ports, for example , A TM Logical IP Subnets ...

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    About VLANs 2-5 Default VLAN When you start up the LANplex system, the system automatically creates a VLAN inter face called the default VLAN. Initially , the default VLAN includes all of the switch ports in the system. In the LANplex system, the default VLAN ser ves to define: ■ The flood domain for prot ocols not suppor ted by an y VLAN in th ...

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    2-6 C HAPTER 2: VLAN S ON THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM This example shows how flooding decisions are made according to VLANs set up by protocol (assuming an 18-port switch): VLAN Exc eption Flooding If data arrives on a switch port for a certain protocol and VLANs f or that protocol are defined in the system but not on that switch port, the default VL ...

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    About VLANs 2-7 Overlapped IP VLANs The LANplex system also gives you the ability to assign network la yer information to IP VLANs. This capabilit y allows network administrators to manage their VLANs by subnet. F looding decisions are made by first matching the incoming frame using the protocol (IP) and then matching it with layer 3 subnet inf or ...

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    2-8 C HAPTER 2: VLAN S ON THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM As shown in this example, when the subnet address of an IP packet does not match any subnet address of an y defined IP VLAN in the system, it is flooded to all of the IP VLANs that share the source switch port, in this case, por t 6. Routing Between VLANs The only way f or stations that are in two ...

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    About VLANs 2-9 If layer 3 inf ormation is provided in the IP VLAN for which you are configuring an IP inter face , the subnet por tion of both addr esses must be compatible. F or example: IP VLAN subnet 157.103.54.0 with subnet mask of 255.255.255.0 IP host inter face addr ess 157.103.54.254 with subnet mask of 255.255.255.0 Layer 2 (bridging) co ...

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    2-10 C HAPTER 2: VLAN S ON THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM VLAN Examples Example 1 F igure 2-1 is an example of a simple configuration that contains three protocol-sensitive VLANs (2 IP and 1 IPX) that share a high-speed FDDI link. The end-stations and servers are on 10Mbps por ts with traffic segregated by protocol. They are only aggregated over the hig ...

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    About VLANs 2-11 Example 2 F igure 2-2 is an example of a configuration that contains two different protocol-sensitive VLANs (IP and IPX) with servers on separate high-speed 100BASE-T por ts. The end-station clients share the same switch por ts , yet the IP and IPX traffic stays separate. See F igure 2-2. . Figur e 2-2 A VLAN Configuration with ...

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    2-12 C HAPTER 2: VLAN S ON THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM ...

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    3 B RIDGING AND R OUTING IN THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM This chapter shows how the LANplex® system operates in a subnetworked routing envir onment and describes the LANplex routing methodology — specifically , how the LANplex bridging and routing model compares with traditional models. What Is Routing? Routing is the process of distributing packets ...

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    3-2 C HAPTER 3: B RIDGING AND R OUTING IN THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM Figur e 3-1 Traditional Architecture of a Routed Network LANplex in a Subnetworked Envir onment The LANplex system allows you to fit E thernet switching capabilit y into highly subnetworked environments. When you put the LANplex system into such a network, the system streamlines you ...

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    What Is Routing? 3-3 Integrating Bridging and Routing The LANplex system integrates bridging and routing . Multiple switch por ts can be assigned to each subnet. See F igure 3-3. Tr affic between por ts assigned to the same subnet is switched transparently using transparent bridging or Express switching (described in the LANplex® 2500 Operation G ...

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    3-4 C HAPTER 3: B RIDGING AND R OUTING IN THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM In the traditional model, if you want to increase the level of segmentation in your network, you must create additional subnets and assign new network addresses to your existing hosts . Bridging and Routing Models The way routing is implement ed in the LANplex system differs from how ...

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    Bridging and Routing Models 3-5 Figur e 3-4 Bridging in the T raditional Bridging and Routing Model In the traditional bridging and routing model, a packet is rou ted as follows (see F igure 3-5): 1 The packet enters the bridge or router . 2 The bridge or router determines that the packet belongs to a recognized routing pr otocol, so the pack et is ...

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    3-6 C HAPTER 3: B RIDGING AND R OUTING IN THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM LANplex Bridging and Routing Model The LANplex 2500 system uses the destination MAC addr ess to determine whether it will bridge or route a packet. Before a host system sends a packet to another host, it compares its own network address to the network address of the other host as fol ...

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    Bridging and Routing Models 3-7 In the LANplex bridging and routing model, a packet is rou ted as follows (see F igure 3-7): 1 The packet enters the LANplex system. 2 The packet ’ s destination address is examined by the bridging layer . 3 The destination address corresponds to the addr ess of one of the system por ts configured for r outing (as ...

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    3-8 C HAPTER 3: B RIDGING AND R OUTING IN THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM ...

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    4 R OUTING WITH IP T ECHNOLOGY This chapter gives an ov er view of IP routing technology , specifically defining: ■ What IP routing inv olves ■ What elements are necessary for IP routers to effectively transmit packets ■ How IP routing transmission errors are detected and resolved ■ Routing with classical IP over A TM IP Routing and the O ...

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    4-2 C HAPTER 4: R OUTING WITH IP T ECHNOLOGY When an IP router sends a packet, it does not k now the complete path to a destination — only the next hop. Each hop in volves three steps: ■ The IP routing algorithm computes the nex t hop IP address , and nex t router inter face, using the r outing table entries. ■ The Address Resolution P rotoco ...

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    Elements of IP Routing 4-3 Addr ess Classes The boundary of the net work part and the host par t depends on the class that the central agency assigns to your network. The primary classes of IP addresses are Class A, Class B , and Class C. ■ Class A addresses — have 8 bits for the network part and 24 bits for the host par t. Although only a few ...

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    4-4 C HAPTER 4: R OUTING WITH IP T ECHNOLOGY Figur e 4-3 How a Subnet Mask Is Applied to the IP Address An example of an IP address that includes network, subnet, and host par ts is 158.101.230.52 with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0 . This address is divided as follows: ■ 158.101 is the network par t ■ 230 is the subnet par t ■ 52 is the host ...

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    Elements of IP Routing 4-5 Figur e 4-4 Router Inter faces in the LANplex System Routing T able A routing table allows a router or host to determine how to send a packet toward the packet ’ s ultimate destination. The routing table contains an entr y for every destination network, subnet, or host to which the router or host is capable of forwardin ...

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    4-6 C HAPTER 4: R OUTING WITH IP T ECHNOLOGY Figur e 4-5 Example of a Routing T able in the LANplex Routing Model Routing table information is generated and updated in either of the following ways: ■ Statically — Y ou manually enter routes, which do not change until you change them (that is, they will not time out). ■ Dynamically — T he rou ...

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    Elements of IP Routing 4-7 An active router sends a RIP message ever y 30 seconds. This message contains both the IP address and a metric (the distance to the destination from that router) for each destination. In RIP , each router that a packet must travel through to reach a destination equals one hop . Default Route In addition to the routes to s ...

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    4-8 C HAPTER 4: R OUTING WITH IP T ECHNOLOGY protocol. The two k ey elements of the ARP request are the tar get and source addresses for both the har dware (MAC addresses) and the protocol (IP addresses). See F igure 4-7. Figur e 4-7 Example of an ARP Request Packet When the devices on the network receive this packet, they examine it, and if their ...

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    IP Routing Transmission Errors 4-9 IP Routing T ransmission Errors Because each router only knows about the nex t hop , it is not aware of problems that might be further “ down the road” towar d the destination. Destinations can be unreachable if : ■ Hardware is temporarily out of service ■ Y ou inadver t ently specified a nonexistent dest ...

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    4-10 C HAPTER 4: R OUTING WITH IP T ECHNOLOGY Routing with Classical IP ov er AT M LANPlex Extended Switching soft ware supports classical IP routing over A TM ARP in an A TM network. Classical IP ov er A TM uses Logical IP Subnets (LISs) to forward packets within the net work envir onment. See the LANplex® 2500 Operation Guide for detailed inform ...

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    IP Routing References 4-11 F or w arding to Nodes within an LIS Nodes can forward packets direc tly to other nodes in the same LIS. T o forward a packet within the same LIS, the sending node requests a translation from the destination IP address to the corresponding A TM address from the A TM ARP server . ■ If the address is known to the ser ver ...

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    4-12 C HAPTER 4: R OUTING WITH IP T ECHNOLOGY ...

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    5 R OUTING WITH IP M ULTICAST This chapter describes the IP multicast routing implementation on the LANplex® system. About IP Multicast Routing IP multicast routing is an extension of the Internet Protocol. Multicast routing allows a router or switch to send packets to a specific group of hosts without using broadcasts or multiple unicast transmi ...

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    5-2 C HAPTER 5: R OUTING WITH IP M ULTICAST DVM RP The Distance V ec tor Multicast Routing P rotocol (DVMRP) establishes the multicast delivery path over a series of routing devices. DVMRP is a simple distance vector routing protocol, similar to the IP Routing Information P rotocol (RIP). Multicast routers exchange distance vector updates that cont ...

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    Multicast Routing Algorithms 5-3 Multicast Routing Algorithms The LANplex system uses three algorithms that support multicast routing: ■ Flooding ■ Spanning T rees ■ Reverse P ath F or warding Flooding Sev eral t ypes of flooding algorithms exist, but they all share the same general principles: a node in the network receives a packet that wa ...

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    5-4 C HAPTER 5: R OUTING WITH IP M ULTICAST F igure 5-1 shows a simple network with five links . Figur e 5-1 Simple Network Implemented Without Using Spanning Tr ee A spanning tree for this network consists of links 1, 2, 3, and 4. See F igure 5-2. Figur e 5-2 Spanning T ree Algorithm Implemented to Block Redundant P aths Rev erse Path F or wardin ...

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    Multicast Interfaces 5-5 Pruning P runing is a method used in the RPF algorithm to for war d pack ets to a spanning tree only if group members exist in the tree . This method results in fewer spanning trees , but it requires dynamic updates to the routing table. Nodes that are at the border of the network and hav e no point beyond them in the RPF s ...

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    5-6 C HAPTER 5: R OUTING WITH IP M ULTICAST Rate Limit The rate limit determines how man y multicast pack ets can travel o ver the inter face in kilobytes-per-second. The LANplex system drops multicast traffic that travels faster than this rate . The default is set to 0, which implies no rate limit is set. In all other instances, the low er the ra ...

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    This chapter provides an o ver view of IPX routing , including: ■ What par t IPX plays in the NetW are envir onment ■ How IPX works ■ What elements are necessary for IPX routers to transmit packets effectively IPX Routing in the NetW are ® En vironment The NetW are® network operating system was developed and introduced to the market by Nove ...

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    6-2 C HAPTER 6: R OUTING WITH IPX Figur e 6-1 NetW are Protocols and the OSI Refer ence Model The LANplex system uses the following protocols f or routing in a Netware environment: ■ Internet P ack et Exchange (IPX) ■ Routing Information P rotocol (RIP) ■ Ser vice A dver tisement P rotocol (SAP) Internet Pack et Exchange (IPX) IPX is the prim ...

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    IPX Routing in the NetWare® Environment 6-3 Routing Information Protoc ol (RIP) RIP allows the exchange of routing inf ormation on a NetWare network. IPX routers use RIP to dynamically create and maintain their routing tables . RIP allows one router to exchange r outing information with a neighboring router . As a router becomes aware of any chang ...

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    6-4 C HAPTER 6: R OUTING WITH IPX How IPX Routing Wo r k s A router operates at the network la yer of the OSI Reference Model. This means that it receives its instructions to route packets from one segment to another from a network-layer pr otocol. IPX, with the help of RIP , per forms these network layer tasks . These tasks include addressing , ro ...

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    How IPX Routing Works 6-5 The packet format consists of the following elements: ■ Checksum — The IPX packet begins with a 16-bit checksum field that is set to 1 s. ■ Packet L ength — This 16-bit field contains the length, in bytes, of the complete network packet. This field includes both the IPX header and the data. The IPX length must b ...

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    6-6 C HAPTER 6: R OUTING WITH IPX IPX Pack et Delivery On a NetWare network, the successful delivery of a packet depends both on the proper addressing of the packet and on the internetwork configuration. P ack et addressing is handled in the packet’ s Media Access Control (MA C) protocol header and IPX header address fields. T o send a pack et ...

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    How IPX Routing Works 6-7 T o find this router , the sending node broadcasts a RIP packet requesting the best route to the destination node ’ s network number . The router residing on the sending node’ s segment with the shortest path to the destination segment responds to the RIP request. The router ’ s response includes its network and nod ...

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    6-8 C HAPTER 6: R OUTING WITH IPX The Elemen ts of IPX Routing IPX routers use the following elements to transmit packets ov er an intranetwork: ■ Router inter faces ■ Routing tables ■ Ser vice Advertising Protocol (SAP) Router Inter faces A router inter face is the connection between the router and the network number (address). In traditiona ...

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    The Elements of IPX Routing 6-9 ■ Hops to Network — Pro vides the number of routers that must be crossed to reach the network segment. ■ Ticks to Network — Pr ovides an estimate of the time necessar y to reach the destination segment. ■ Node — The node address of the r outer that can for war d pack ets to each segment. When set to all z ...

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    6-10 C HAPTER 6: R OUTING WITH IPX system uses RIP (one of the most widely used IGPs), to dynamically build its routing tables. RIP operates in terms of active and passive devices. The activ e devices , usually routers, broadcast their RIP messages to all devices in a network; they update their own routing tables when they receive a RIP message . T ...

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    The Elements of IPX Routing 6-11 A workstation must first know a ser v er ’ s network address before it can initiate a session with a file ser v er. SAP Pack et Structure SAP uses IPX and the medium-access protocols for its transport. The packet structure allows the following functions: ■ A workstation request for the name and addr ess of the ...

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    6-12 C HAPTER 6: R OUTING WITH IPX A SAP packet consists of the following fields: ■ Operation — This field indicates the t ype of operation the SAP packet per f orms. It can be set to one of the following values: 1=Request 2=Response 3=Get Nearest Ser ver Request 4=Get Nearest Ser v er Response ■ Ser v er Entr y — Each 64-b yte ser ver en ...

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    The Elements of IPX Routing 6-13 The SAP broadcasts that servers and routers send are local and , therefore, only received by SAP agents on their connected segments. Howev er , SAP agents periodically broadcast their server information so that all SAP agents on the internetwork ha ve information about all ser vers that are active on the internetwor ...

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    6-14 C HAPTER 6: R OUTING WITH IPX Static Ser v ers. A static ser ver is one y ou manually configure in the ser ver information table. Static ser vers are useful in en vironments where no routing protocol is used or where y ou want to override some of the ser v ers generated with a routing/server protocol. Because static ser v ers do not automatic ...

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    The Elements of IPX Routing 6-15 elapsed since information was received concerning a particular table entr y . Since this information is either new or changed , the SAP agent that receives this information immediately passes it on, and the change is quickly learned throughout the internetwork. SAP Request Handling . When a SAP agent receives a gene ...

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    6-16 C HAPTER 6: R OUTING WITH IPX ...

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    This chapter provides an o ver view of AppleT alk® routing, and includes these topics: ■ AppleT alk Network Elements ■ AppleT alk Protocols ■ About AARP About AppleT alk® AppleT alk is a suite of protocols defined by Apple Computer , Inc., for connecting computers, peripherals devices, and other equipment on a network. AppleT alk protocols ...

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    7-2 C HAPTER 7: R OUTING IN AN A PPLE T ALK ® E NVIRONMENT AppleT alk® Networks A network in an AppleT alk internet is a cable segment attached to a router . Each network is identified by a network number or range of network numbers. The network administrator assigns these numbers from a range of valid network numbers. T wo AppleT alk network nu ...

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    AppleTalk® Network Elements 7-3 AppleT alk® Zones An AppleT alk zone is a logical collection of nodes on an AppleT alk internet. A zone can include all nodes in a single network or a collection of nodes in different networks. Y ou assign a unique name to each zone to identify it in the internet. F igure 7-1 illustrates the relationship between ph ...

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    7-4 C HAPTER 7: R OUTING IN AN A PPLE T ALK ® E NVIRONMENT quickly within the zone because the zone includes fewer devices than the entire internet does. Seed Routers A seed router initializes the internet with AppleT alk configuration information, including network numbers and zone names. The seed router broadcasts this information so that nonse ...

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    AppleTalk Protocols 7-5 Figur e 7-2 AppleT alk P rotocols and the OSI Reference Model The AppleT alk six-layer protocol suite is not fully compliant with the OSI seven-layer r eference model. However , AppleT alk provides many of the functions and ser vices pro vided by OSI. Note that AppleT alk has no specific protocols for the application lay er ...

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    7-6 C HAPTER 7: R OUTING IN AN A PPLE T ALK ® E NVIRONMENT because it is closely related to the Ethernet and token ring LAPs . This protocol is usually included in the definition of each LAP , so it does not appear in the reference model. S ee the section “ About AARP” later in this chapter for more inf ormation about this protocol. The Datag ...

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    AppleTalk Protocols 7-7 Each router builds a routing table that is the basis of dynamic routing operations in an AppleT alk internet. Ever y 10 seconds, each router sends an RTMP data packet to the network. Routers use the information that they receive in the RTMP broadcasts t o build their routing tables. Each entr y in the routing table contains ...

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    7-8 C HAPTER 7: R OUTING IN AN A PPLE T ALK ® E NVIRONMENT Figur e 7-3 A Simple AppleT alk Network Y ou can view the AppleT alk routing tables in y our network through the Administration Console . AppleT alk Echo Protocol (AEP). AppleT alk nodes use the AEP to send datagrams to other nodes in the network. It causes the destination node to return, ...

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    AppleTalk Protocols 7-9 AppleT alk T ransaction Protocol (A TP). This protocol, along with the AppleT alk Data Stream Protocol (ADSP), ensur es that DDP pack ets are delivered to a destination without any losses or corruption. Name Binding Protocol (NBP). This protocol translates alphanumeric entity names to AppleT alk addresses. It maintains a tab ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 86

    7-10 C HAPTER 7: R OUTING IN AN A PPLE T ALK ® E NVIRONMENT AppleT alk Data Stream Protocol (ADSP). The ADSP works with the A TP to ensure reliable data transmission. Unlike A TP , however , ADSP provides full-duplex byte-stream delivery . This means that two nodes can communicate simultaneously . ASDP also includes flow control, so that a fast s ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 87

    About AARP 7-11 The AARP maintains an Address Mapping T able (AMT ) with the most recently used hardware addr esses and their corresponding AARP addresses. If an address is not in this table, AARP sends a request to the pr otocol address and adds the hardware addr ess to the table when the destination node replies. Y ou can view this table, called ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 88

    7-12 C HAPTER 7: R OUTING IN AN A PPLE T ALK ® E NVIRONMENT ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 89

    8 A DMINISTERING VLAN S This chapter describes how to display inf ormation about VLANs and how t o configure VLANs. Through the Administration C onsole, you can: ■ Display summary or detailed information on VLANs ■ Define or modify a VLAN definition ■ Delete a VLAN definition Displa ying VLAN Information Y ou can display a summar y of VLA ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 90

    8-2 C HAPTER 8: A DMINISTERING VLAN S Index Name Layer 3 1 none 2 eastgroup 158.101.111.16 255.255.255.0 3 westgroup none 4 northgroup 158.101.112.14 255.255.255.0 Example of a detailed display for the VLANs: Select menu option (bridge/vlan): detail Index Protocol Identifier Ports 1 default 0 1-17 2 IP 2 1, 5-7 3 IPX 3 8-10 4 IP 4 7, 12-15 Index Na ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 91

    Defining VLAN Information 8-3 Defining VLAN Information F ollow these steps to create a VLAN definition: 1 F rom the top level of the Administration Console , enter : bridge vlan define 2 Enter the appropriate protocol suite: (IP, IPX, AppleTalk, XNS, DECnet, SNA, Banyan, X.25, NetBIOS, NetBEUI, default ) 3 Enter the VLAN inter face identifier . ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 92

    8-4 C HAPTER 8: A DMINISTERING VLAN S Example: Select menu option (bridge/vlan): define Enter Protocol Suite (IP,IPX,AppleTalk,XNS,DECnet,SNA,Banyan,X.25,NetBIOS,NeBEUI, default): IP Enter VLAN Identifier: 1 Enter VLAN Name: “SD Marketing” Ports 1=FDDI, 2-17=Ethernet Enter port(s) (1-17|all): 1-5 Layer 3 Address (undefined, defined): defined En ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 93

    Removing VLAN Information 8-5 Example: Select menu option (bridge/vlan): modify Select VLAN interface [1-2]: 2 Protocol Suite (IP,IPX,AppleTalk,XNS,DECnet,SNA, Banyan,X.25,NetBIOS,NetBEUI,default) [AppleTalk]: IP VLAN Identifier [1]: 2 VLAN Name [Sales]: Ports 1=FDDI, 2-17=Ethernet Enter port(s) (1-17|all) [1-5]: Layer 3 Address (undefined,defined) ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 94

    8-6 C HAPTER 8: A DMINISTERING VLAN S ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 95

    9 A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING This chapter describes how to set up your LANplex® system to use the Internet Protocol (IP). For more inf ormation about how IP works, see P ar t III of this guide. Y ou can display or configure the following IP characteristics on your LANplex system: ■ IP inter faces ■ Routes ■ Address Resolution P rotocol (ARP ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 96

    9-2 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING LIS Interfaces A logical IP subnet (LIS) inter face supports logical IP over A TM. Y ou define LIS inter faces f or the por ts on A TM modules only . See the Chapter 11 of the LANplex® 2500 Operation Guide for more inf ormation about the A TM protocol. See the LANplex® 2500 Administration C onsole User ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 97

    Administering interfaces 9-3 this option, the system displays a list of av ailable VLAN index es and the bridge por ts associated with them. ■ LIS Inter fac e — When y ou selec t LIS as the inter face type, the Administration Console pr ompts you for LIS inter face information. The information you enter depends on whether y ou define permanent ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 98

    9-4 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING Example summar y display : Example detail display : Defining an IP LIS Inter face When you define an IP LIS interface, you specify several general IP interface characteristics and IP LIS charac teristics. Before you define an IP LIS interface with SVCs, be sure y ou have defined an A TM ARP ser v er as ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 99

    Administering interfaces 9-5 The Console pr ompts you for the inter face ’ s parameters. T o use the value in brackets, press [Return] at the prompt. 2 Enter the IP address of the inter face. 3 Enter the subnet mask of the network to which the inter face is to be connected. 4 Enter the cost value of the interface. 5 Enter the type of IP inter fac ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 100

    9-6 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING Defining an IP VLAN Interface When you define an IP VLAN inter face, y ou specify several inter face characteristics, as well as the index of the VLAN associated with the inter face . Y ou must first define a VLAN, as described in Chapter 8, Administering VL ANs , before you define an associated IP VL ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 101

    Administering interfaces 9-7 Modifying an Inter face Y ou might want to change the configuration of an inter face you hav e already defined . Y ou can add one or more advertisement addresses or PVCs to an interface through the addAdvertisement and addPVC commands as well as through the IP interface modify command. If you add or change an adv er t ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 102

    9-8 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING Adding an Adv er tisement Addr ess This command adds an advertisement address to the adver tisement address list associated with the inter face. T o add an adver tisement address: 1 F rom the top level of the Administration Console , enter : ip interface addAdvertisement 2 Enter the inter face index number ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 103

    Administering Routes 9-9 Adding a P ermanent Virtual Circuit (PVC) T his command adds a PVC to an LIS inter face. T o add a PVC: 1 F rom the top level of the Administration Console , enter : ip interface addPvc 2 Enter the index inter face number that y ou want to associate with the PVC. 3 Enter the Vir tual P ath Inter face ( VPI) and the Vir tual ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 104

    9-10 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING more than one routing table entry matching an address, it uses the most specific route , which is the route with the most bits set in its subnet mask. F or example, the route to a subnet within a destination network is more specific than the route to the destination network. ■ Routing Metric — This ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 105

    Administering Routes 9-11 Displaying the Routing T able Y ou can display a switching module ’ s routing table to determine which routes are configured and whether the r outes are operational. T o display the contents of the routing table, enter the following command string from the top level of the Administration C onsole: ip route display The e ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 106

    9-12 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING Example: Enter destination IP address: 158.101.4.0 Enter subnet mask [255.255.0.0]: 255.255.255.0 Enter gateway IP address: 158.101.2.8 Removing a Route T o remove a route: 1 F rom the top level of the Administration Console , enter : ip route remove 2 Enter the destination IP address of the route. 3 Ente ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 107

    Administering the ARP Cache 9-13 T o statically configure the default route: 1 F rom the top level of the Administration Console , enter : ip route default 2 Enter the gateway IP address of the route . The default route is immediately added to the routing table . Removing the Default Route T o remove a default route , enter the following command s ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 108

    9-14 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING Displaying the ARP Cache Y ou can display the contents of the ARP cache for your system. T o display the contents of the ARP cache, enter the following command string from the top level of the Administration C onsole: ip arp display Example display of the contents of the ARP cache: Removing an ARP Cache E ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 109

    Administering ATM ARP Servers 9-15 Flushing the ARP Cache Y ou might want to delete all entries from the ARP cache if the MAC address has changed. T o remove all entries from the ARP cache , from the top level of the Administration Console , enter: ip arp flush The ARP cache entries are immediately remo ved from the table. Administ ering ATM ARP Se ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 110

    9-16 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING Defining an A T M ARP Ser ver D etermine the location of the A TM ARP server you want to use. Y ou can define the A TM ARP ser ver externally on another LANplex system or on an A TM switch, such as 3Com ’ s CELLplex™ 7000 system. 1 T o define an A TM ARP ser ver , from the top level of the Administ ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 111

    Administering ATM ARP Servers 9-17 Displaying the A TM ARP Cache T o display the contents of the A TM ARP cache , from the top level of the Administration Console , enter : ip atmArpServer arp display Example: Removing an A TM ARP Cache Entry T o remove an entr y from the A TM ARP cache , from the top level of the Administration Console , enter : i ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 112

    9-18 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING Flushing the A TM ARP Cache T o remove all entries fr om the A TM ARP cache, from the top level of the Administration Console , enter: ip atmarpserver arp flush The A TM ARP cache entries are immediately remo ved from the table. Administ ering UDP Helper UDP Helper allows you to send User Datagram P rotoc ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 113

    Administering UDP Helper 9-19 Displaying UDP Helper Information Y ou can display the hop count and threshold configuration and list the por ts with their IP forwarding addresses that are defined for your LANplex system. T o display UDP Helper information, enter the following command string from the top level of the Administration C onsole: ip udp ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 114

    9-20 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING Setting the BOO TP Hop Co unt Limit Y ou can set the maximum hop count for a packet to be for war ded through the router . The range is 0 through 16. The default is 4. T o set the hop count limit: 1 F rom the top level of the Administration Console , enter : ip udpHelper hopCountLimit 2 Enter the BOO TP r ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 115

    Enabling and Disabling ICMP Router Discovery 9-21 Enabling and Disabling ICMP Router Disco very The Internet Contr ol Message Protocol (ICMP) Router Discovery protocol (RFC 1256) allows an appropriately configured end station to locate one or more routers on the LAN to which it is attached . The end station then automatically installs a default ro ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 116

    9-22 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING RIP default mode By default, RIP operates in passive mode. T o set the RIP operating mode: 1 F rom the top level of the Administration Console , enter : ip rip 2 Enter the RIP mode ( off , passive , o r active ). T o use the value in brackets, press [Return] at the prompt. Example: Select RIP mode (off,pa ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 117

    Displaying IP Statistics 9-23 Displaying IP Statistics T o display IP statistics, enter the f ollowing from the top level of the Administration Console: ip statistics Example: IP routing is enabled, RIP is active, ICMP router discovery is disabled. inReceives forwDatagrams inDelivers outRequests 51213 49743 3227 2285 outNoRoutes inHdrErrors inAddrE ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 118

    9-24 C HAPTER 9: A DMINISTERING IP R OUTING ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 119

    10 A DMINISTERING IP M ULTICAST R OUTING This chapter describes how to set up your LANplex® system to use IP multicast routing . Y ou should have previously defined IP inter faces and routes as described in Chapter 9: Administering IP Routing , before you define any IP multicast interfaces. This appendix includes information on how to display or ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 120

    10-2 C HAPTER 10: A DMINISTERING IP M ULTICAST R OUTING Enabling and Disabling DVMRP DVMRP is the simple Distance V ector Multicast Routing Protocol, similar to the IP Routing Information P rotocol. Multicast routers exchange distance vector updates that contain lists of destinations and the distance in hops to each destination. The rout ers mainta ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 121

    Administering IP Multicast Interfaces 10-3 When you select the IGMP option, the inter face prompts y ou to enable or disable IGMP snooping mode and IGMP quer y mode. Both are enabled by default. Under most conditions, IGMP snooping mode and IGMP query mode should remain enabled . T o enable or disable IGMP , from the top level of the Administration ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 122

    10-4 C HAPTER 10: A DMINISTERING IP M ULTICAST R OUTING Rate Limit The rate limit determines how fast multicast traffic can trav el over the inter face in kilobytes per second . Multicast traffic may not exceed this rate limit or the LANplex system will drop packets in order to maintain the set rate. The default is set to 0 , which implies no rat ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 123

    Administering IP Multicast Interfaces 10-5 Disabling Multicast Inter faces T o disable multicast routing on an inter face: 1 F rom the top level of the Administration Console , enter : ip multicast interface disable 2 Enter the index number of the inter face y ou want to disable. The inter face is disabled. Enabling Multicast Inter faces Multicast ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 124

    10-6 C HAPTER 10: A DMINISTERING IP M ULTICAST R OUTING Administ ering Multicast T unnels A multicast tunnel allows multicast packets to cross several unicast routers to a destination router that supports multicast. A tunnel has two end points. The local end point is associated with an inter face on the LANplex router . When you define the tunnel, ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 125

    Administering Multicast Tunnels 10-7 Defining a Multicast T unnel T o define an IP multicast tunnel: 1 F rom the top level of the Administration Console , enter : ip multicast tunnel define 2 Enter the index number(s) of the inter face(s) with which y ou want to associate a multicast tunnel. 3 Enter the IP address of the destination multicast rou ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 126

    10-8 C HAPTER 10: A DMINISTERING IP M ULTICAST R OUTING Displaying Routes T o display all av ailable routes in the IP multicast routing table: 1 F rom top level of the Administration Console , enter : ip multicast routeDisplay The DVMRP status and IGMP status appear on the screen. The following displa y shows all available multicast routes: T able ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 127

    Displaying the Multicast Cache 10-9 Displaying the Multicast Cache The IP multicast cache contains the IP source address and destination address for packets obser v ed on the system. The multicast cache shows you how information is routed ov er inter faces and ports in your system. T o display all learned routes in the multicast cache: 1 F rom the ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 128

    10-10 C HAPTER 10: A DMINISTERING IP M ULTICAST R OUTING Example: Enter multicast source address [131.188.0.0] Enter multicast group address [244.2.0.2] DVMRP is enabled, IGMP snooping is enabled The following displa y shows the multicast cache configuration: Multicast Routing Cache Table (125 entries) Origin Mcast-group CTmr Age PTmr In-If Out-If ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 129

    Displaying the Multicast Cache 10-11 T able 10-2 describes the fields in the cache display . T able 10-2 Information in the cache display Field Description Origin The source of the incoming packets. Entries preceded by an angle bracket (>) indicate a multicast subnetwork. Entries without an angle bracket, beneath the subnetwork entries, are mul ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 130

    10-12 C HAPTER 10: A DMINISTERING IP M ULTICAST R OUTING ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 131

    11 A DMINISTERING IPX R OUTING This chapter describes how to set up your LANplex® system to use the Internet P ack et Exchange (IPX) protocol to r oute pack ets. F or more information about how IPX works , see Part III of this Guide. Y ou can display and configure the following on your LANplex system: ■ IPX inter faces ■ Routes ■ Ser vers ? ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 132

    11-2 C HAPTER 11: A DMINISTERING IPX R OUTING Administ ering Inter faces An IPX interface defines the relationship between an IPX V ir tual LAN ( VLAN) and the IPX network. Every IPX inter face has one IPX VLAN associated with it. Each switching module has one IPX interface defined for each subnet directly connected to it. Y ou must first defin ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 133

    Administering Interfaces 11-3 Displaying IPX Inter faces Y ou can display a table that shows all IPX inter faces and their parameter settings configured for the system. T o display IPX inter face information: F rom the Administration Console top-level menu , enter : ipx interface display As shown in the following example , the current configurati ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 134

    11-4 C HAPTER 11: A DMINISTERING IPX R OUTING Example: Modifying an Inter face Y ou might want to change the configuration of an inter face that y ou have already defined . T o modify an IPX inter face: 1 F rom the Administration Console top-level menu , enter : ipx interface modify Y ou are prompted for the interface parameters. Press [Return] a ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 135

    Administering Routes 11-5 Administ ering Routes Y our system maintains a table of routes to other IPX networks. Y ou can either use the Routing Information P rotocol (RIP) to exchange routing information automatically or make static entries in this table using the Administration Console . Each routing table entry contains the following information: ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 136

    11-6 C HAPTER 11: A DMINISTERING IPX R OUTING Displaying the Routing T able Y ou can display the routing tables for the system to determine which routes are configured and if they ar e operational. T o display the contents of the routing table, from the Administration Console top-level menu , enter : ipx route display The example displays the con? ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 137

    Administering Routes 11-7 5 Enter the node address of the route. A static route is defined in the following example: Removing a Route T o remove a route: 1 F rom the Administration Console top-level menu , enter : ipx route remove 2 Enter the 4-byte IPX network address. The route is immediately deleted from the r outing table. Flushing Routes F lu ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 138

    11-8 C HAPTER 11: A DMINISTERING IPX R OUTING Administ ering Ser vers Y our system maintains a table of servers that reside on other IPX networks. Y ou can either use the S er vice Adv er tising P rotocol (SAP) to exchange server information automatically or make static entries in this ser ver table using the Administration C onsole. Each ser ver t ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 139

    Administering Servers 11-9 Displaying the Ser ver T able Y ou can display the ser ver table for the system to determine which ser vers are learned and if they are operational. T o display the contents of the ser ver table , from the Administration Console top-level menu , enter : ipx server display Defining a Static Serve r Before you define stat ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 140

    11-10 C HAPTER 11: A DMINISTERING IPX R OUTING 8 Enter the number of hops to the ser ver . Example: Removing a Server T o remove a ser v er : 1 F rom the Administration Console top-level menu , enter : ipx server remove 2 Enter the ser vice type of the ser ver . 3 Enter the ser vice name of the ser ver . The server is immediately deleted from the s ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 141

    Setting IPX Forwarding 11-11 Setting IPX F or warding Y ou can control whether the system forwards or discards IPX packets addressed to other routers. When you enable IPX for war ding, the system acts as a normal IPX router , forwarding IPX packets from one network to another when required . When you disable IPX for warding , the system discards an ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 142

    11-12 C HAPTER 11: A DMINISTERING IPX R OUTING RIP default mode By default, RIP is off . T o set the RIP operating mode: 1 F rom the Administration Console top-level menu , enter : ipx rip 2 Enter the RIP mode ( off , passive , o r active ). T o use the value in brackets, press [Return] at the prompt. Setting the Enhanced RIP Mode Standard IPX RIP ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 143

    Setting the SAP Mode 11-13 Setting the SAP Mode Y ou can selec t a SAP mode that is appropriate for y our network. SAP can operate in any of three modes: ■ Off — The system ignores all incoming SAP packets and does not generate any SAP packets of its own. ■ Passiv e — The system processes all incoming SAP packets, but it does not broadcast ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 144

    11-14 C HAPTER 11: A DMINISTERING IPX R OUTING Displaying Statistics The A dministration Console allows you to display f our t ypes of IPX-related statistics: ■ IPX summar y statistics ■ IPX RIP statistics ■ IPX SAP statistics ■ IPX forwarding statistics Displaying IPX Summary Statistics T o display IPX summary statistics, from the Administ ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 145

    Displaying Statistics 11-15 Displaying IPX RIP Statistics T o display IPX RIP statistics, from the Administration C onsole top-level menu, enter: ipx statistics rip Example below : T able 11-2 describers the IPX RIP statistics. Top-Level Menu system ethernet fddi atm bridge ip ➧ ipx appletalk snmp analyzer script logout interface route server for ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 146

    11-16 C HAPTER 11: A DMINISTERING IPX R OUTING Displaying IPX SAP Statistics T o display IPX SAP statistics, from the Administration C onsole top-level menu, enter: ipx statistics sap Example: T able 11-1 describes the IPX SAP statistics. Top-Level Menu system ethernet fddi atm bridge ip ➧ ipx appletalk snmp analyzer script logout interface route ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 147

    Displaying Statistics 11-17 Displaying IPX F or warding Statistics T o display IPX Forwarding statistics, from the A dministration Console top-level menu, enter: ipx statistics forwarding Example: T able 11-4 describes the IPX forwarding statistics. Top-Level Menu system ethernet fddi atm bridge ip ➧ ipx appletalk snmp analyzer script logout inte ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 148

    11-18 C HAPTER 11: A DMINISTERING IPX R OUTING T able 11-4 IPX Forwarding Statistics Field Description Received Number of IPX forwarding packets received Transmitted Number of IPX forwarding packets transmitted Forwarded Number of IPX packets forwarded by the IPX router Hdr Errors Number of IPX packets dropped due to IPX Network layer header errors ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 149

    12 A DMINISTERING A PPLE T ALK ® R OUTING This chapter describes how to set up your LANplex® system to use the AppleT alk protocol to route packets. F or more information on how AppleT alk routing works, see Chapter 7: Routing with AppleT alk. Y ou can display and configure the following: ■ AppleT alk inter faces ■ Routes ■ AARP cache ■ ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 150

    12-2 C HAPTER 12: A DMINISTERING A PPLE T ALK ® R OUTING Administ ering Inter faces An AppleT alk inter face defines the relationship between an AppleT alk Vir tual LAN ( VLAN) and the AppleT alk network. Every AppleT alk inter face has one AppleT alk VLAN associat ed with it. Each switching module has one AppleT alk inter face defined for each ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 151

    Administering Interfaces 12-3 Displaying AppleT alk Inter faces Y ou can display a table that shows all AppleT alk inter faces and their parameter settings configured for the system. T o display the AppleT alk interfaces defined on the router , from the Administration Console top-lev el menu, enter: appletalk interface display Example: Defining ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 152

    12-4 C HAPTER 12: A DMINISTERING A PPLE T ALK ® R OUTING 6 Enter the zone name. Y ou can enter up to 16 zone names per inter fac e. 7 Ty p e q after entering all the zone names. 8 Enter the index of the AppleT alk VLAN associated with this int er face. Example: Removing an Inter face Y ou might want to remove an interface if you no longer per form ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 153

    Administering Routes 12-5 Administ ering Routes Y our system maintains a table of routes to other AppleT alk networks. The routing table is generated automatically by the Routing T able Maintenance Protocol (RTMP). RTMP defines 1) the rules for exchanging information between routers so that the routers can maintain their routing tables , and 2) th ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 154

    12-6 C HAPTER 12: A DMINISTERING A PPLE T ALK ® R OUTING The following example shows a routing table displa y : Flushing all Routes Flushing deletes all dynamically learned routes fr om the routing table. T o flush all learned routes: 1 At the Administration C onsole’ s top-level menu, enter: appletalk route flush g Network Range Distance Inter ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 155

    Administering the AARP Cache 12-7 Administ ering the AARP Cache AARP allows hardware addresses to be mapped to an AppleT alk protocol address. AppleT alk uses dynamically assigned 24-bit addresses, unlike the statically-assigned 48-bit addresses used by Ethernet and token ring. T o mak e the address mapping process easier , AARP uses an Address Map ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 156

    12-8 C HAPTER 12: A DMINISTERING A PPLE T ALK ® R OUTING Displaying the AARP Cache Y ou can display the AARP cache for the system to determine which routes are configured and if they are operational. T o display the contents of the AARP cache: F rom the Administration Console top-level menu , enter : appletalk aarp display The following example s ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 157

    Administering the AARP Cache 12-9 Removing an Entry in the Cache T o remove an AARP cache entr y: 1 At the Administration C onsole’ s top-level menu, enter: appletalk aarp remove 2 Enter the AARP address at the prompt. The entry is removed. Flushing All C ache Entries T o flush all AARP cache entries: 1 At the Administration C onsole’ s top-le ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 158

    12-10 C HAPTER 12: A DMINISTERING A PPLE T ALK ® R OUTING Displaying the Zone T able AppleT alk allows for the logical grouping of nodes into zones to make navigation through the netw ork easier . This is done with the Zone Information P rotocol (ZIP). ZIP helps routers maintain a mapping of network numbers to zones in the entire network. T o do t ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 159

    Configuring Forwarding 12-11 Depending on the command entered, the z one table is displayed by network or zone. An example of each type of display is shown below: C onfiguring F or warding Y ou can control whether the router forwards or discards AppleT alk packets addressed to other hosts. When you enable for warding , the router processes packets ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 160

    12-12 C HAPTER 12: A DMINISTERING A PPLE T ALK ® R OUTING C onfiguring Checksum Checksum is a simple method used for detecting errors in the transmission of data. Checksum generation totals the bytes comprising the data and adds this sum to the end of the data packet. Checksum verification allows you to verify the integrity of the data that is r ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 161

    Viewing Appletalk Statistics 12-13 Viewing Appletalk Statistics Y ou can view statistics specific to the following AppleT alk protocols: ■ Datagram Deliver y P rotocol (DDP) ■ Routing T able Maintenance Protocol (RTMP) ■ Zone Inf ormation Protocol (ZIP) ■ Name Binding Protocol (NBP) Displaying DDP Statistics T o display DDP statistics: F r ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 162

    12-14 C HAPTER 12: A DMINISTERING A PPLE T ALK ® R OUTING Displaying RTMP Information T o display RTMP statistics: F rom the Administration Console top-level menu , enter : appletalk statistics rtmp An example of summar y statistics is shown below : T able 12-2 describes the RTMP statistics you can view . inTooShorts Number of input DDP datagrams ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 163

    Viewing Appletalk Statistics 12-15 Displaying ZIP Information T o display ZIP statistics: F rom the Administration Console top-level menu , enter : appletalk statistics zip T able 12-2 RTMP Statistics Field Description inDatas Number of good RTMP data packets received inRequests Number of good RTMP request packets received outDatas Number of good R ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 164

    12-16 C HAPTER 12: A DMINISTERING A PPLE T ALK ® R OUTING An example of summar y statistics is shown below : T able 12-3 describes the ZIP statistics you can view : DDP forwarding is enabled. inQueries inReplies inExReplies inGniRequests 248 14 0 182 inGniReplies inLocalZones inZoneLists 22 30 0 inObsoletes inZoneCons inZoneInvs inErrors 0 0 22 0 ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 165

    Viewing Appletalk Statistics 12-17 Displaying NBP Information The NBP handles the translations between the numeric internet address and the alphanumeric entity names used by AppleT alk. T o display NBP statistics: F rom the Administration Console top-level menu , enter : appletalk statistics nbp An example of summar y statistics is shown below : ou ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 166

    12-18 C HAPTER 12: A DMINISTERING A PPLE T ALK ® R OUTING T able 12-4 describes the NBP statistics you can view . T able 12-4 NBP Statistics Field Description inLkupReqs Number of NBP Lookup Requests received inBcastsReqs Number of NBP Broadcast Requests received inFwdReqs Number of NBP Forward Requests received inLkupReplies Number of NBP Lookup ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 167

    V Chapter 13 Remote Monitoring (RMON) T echnology R EMOTE M ONITORING (RMON) AND THE LAN PLEX ® S YSTEM ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 168

    13 R EMOTE M ONITORING (RMON) T ECHNOLOGY This chapter provides an o ver view of RMON and describes the specific LANplex® RMON implementation. What Is RMON? The Remote Monitoring (RMON) Management Information Base (MIB) provides a way to monitor and analyz e a local area network LAN from a remote location. RMON is defined by the Internet Enginee ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 169

    13-2 C HAPTER 13: R EMOTE M ONITORING (RMON) T ECHNOLOGY Benefits of RMON T raditional network management applications poll network devices such as switches, bridges , and routers at regular inter v als from a network management console. The console gathers statistics, identifies trends, and can highlight network events. The console polls network ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 170

    LANplex RMON Implementation 13-3 3Com T ransc end RMON Agents RMON requires one probe per LAN segment. Because a segment is a por tion of the LAN separated by a bridge or router , the cost of implementing many probes in a lar ge net work can be high. T o solve this problem, 3Com has built an inexpensive RMON probe into the T ranscend SmartAgent sof ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 171

    13-4 C HAPTER 13: R EMOTE M ONITORING (RMON) T ECHNOLOGY Figur e 13-1 Embedded RMON Implemented on the LANplex System Management Information Base (MIB) A MIB is a structured set of data that describes the way the network is functioning. The management sof tware , k nown as the agent , gains access to this set of data and extrac ts the information i ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 172

    Management Information Base (MIB) 13-5 Figur e 13-2 Example of an RMON MIB Counter Object The displayed inf ormation includes these items: ■ The formal name of the counter is etherStatsPkts. (Ethernet, Statistics , P ackets) ■ The access is read-only ■ The number of the counter ’ s column in the table: 5 The name of the table in which the c ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 173

    13-6 C HAPTER 13: R EMOTE M ONITORING (RMON) T ECHNOLOGY Alarms The LANplex system supports the following syntax for alarms: counters , gauges, integers and timeticks. These mechanisms repor t information about the network to the network administrator . Counters , for example, hold and update the number of occurrences of a particular event through ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 174

    Alarms 13-7 Setting Alarm Thresholds T hresholds determine when an alarm repor ts that a counter has exceeded a cer tain value . Y ou can set alarm thresholds through the network manually , and choose any value f or them that is appropriate for your application. The network management software monitors the counters and thresholds continually during ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 175

    13-8 C HAPTER 13: R EMOTE M ONITORING (RMON) T ECHNOLOGY RMON Hysteresis Mechanism The RMON hysteresis mechanism pr ovides a way to prevent small fluctuations in counter values from causing alarms. This mechanism generates an alarm only under the following conditions: ■ The counter value ex ceeds the high threshold after previously exceeding the ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 176

    VI Appendix A T echnical Support A PPENDIX ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 177

    A T ECHNICAL S UPPORT 3Com pro vides easy access to technical suppor t information thr ough a variety of ser vices. This appendix describes these services. On-line T echnical Ser vices 3C om offers worldwide product suppor t 24 hours a day , seven days a week, through the following on-line systems: ■ 3Com Bulletin Board Service (3ComBBS) ■ W or ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 178

    A-2 A PPENDIX A: T ECHNICAL S UPPORT Acc ess by Digital Modem ISDN users can dial in to 3ComBBS using a digital modem for fast access up to 56 Kbps. T o access 3ComBBS using ISDN, dial the following number: (408) 654-2703 W orld Wide W eb Site Access the latest networking information on 3Com ’ s World Wide W eb site by entering our URL into your ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 179

    Support from Your Network Supplier A-3 3ComF ac ts ™ Automated F ax S ervice 3Com Corporation ’ s interactive fax ser vice , 3ComF acts, provides data sheets , technical ar ticles, diagrams , and troubleshooting instruc tions on 3Com products 24 hours a day , seven days a week. Call 3ComF ac ts using your T ouch-T one® telephone at one of thes ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 180

    A-4 A PPENDIX A: T ECHNICAL S UPPORT Suppor t from 3C om If you are unable to receive support from your network supplier , technical suppor t contracts are available from 3C om. In the U.S. and Canada, call (800) 876-3266 for customer ser vice. If you are outside the U.S. and Canada, contact your local 3Com sales office to find your authorized se ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 181

    I NDEX Numerics 3Com Bulletin Board Service (3ComBBS) A-1 3Com sales offices A-4 3ComF acts A-3 A AARP 7-10 AARP cache administering 12-7 displaying 12-8 removing an entr y from 12-9 address classes 4-3 IP to MAC, translating 9-13 MAC 3-3 network 3-3 Address Resolution P rotocol. See ARP Administration Console menu descriptions 1-2 top-level menu ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 182

    2 I NDEX bridging/routing LANplex model 3-4 traditional model 3-4 bulletin board ser vice A-1 C cache displaying the IP multicast 10-9 checksum configuring AppleT alk 12-12 chooser , Macintosh 7-2 CompuServe A-2 conventions notice icons 2 D datagram deliver y protocol 7-6 datagrams, statistics 9-23 data-link layer 4-1 DDP statistics 12-13 default ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 183

    I NDEX 3 displaying an 11-3 modifying an 11-4 removing an 11-4 Interior Gateway Protocols (IGP) 4-6, 6-9 Internet address. See IP address Internet Control Message P rotocol. See ICMP Internet Protocol. See r eferences with IP address intranetwork routing diagram 3-2 IP address translation 9-13 ARP cache 9-13 enabling routing 9-20 inter face 9-1 mai ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 184

    4 I NDEX LIS inter faces characteristics of 9-3 defining 9-4 M MAC (Media Access Contr ol). See FDDI MAC MAC address 3-3 ARP and 9-13 bridging in switching modules, and 3-6 compared to IP address 4-2 in ARP Request 4-8 located with ARP 4-7 use in IP routing 4-8 Macintosh, chooser 7-2 management IP inter face 9-1 management console RMON 13-1 MBONE ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 185

    I NDEX 5 management console 13-1 MIB 13-1, 13-2, 13-4 probe 13-1, 13-2 route, IP default 9-10 defining static 9-11 removing default 9-13 removing from table 9-12 status 9-10 route, IPX removing a 11-7 router interface, IP described 4-4 diagram 4-5 routing table, and the 4-5 router interface, IPX described 6-8 routers, seed 7-4 routes, displaying I ...

  • 3Com 2500 - page 186

    6 I NDEX timing out, IP route status 9-10 T-notify configuring 8-4 transmission errors ICMP Redirect 4-9 reasons for 4-9 T TL threshold 5-5 IP multicast 10-3 tunnels IP multicast 5-6, 10-6 V VLAN information defining 8-3 displaying 8-1 modifying 8-4 removing 8-5 VLAN inter faces about 9-1 characteristics of 9-2 defining 9-6 VLANs application ori ...

Fabricant 3Com Catégorie Switch

Les documents que nous recevons du fabricant de l'appareil3Com 2500 peuvent être divisés en plusieurs groupes. Ceux-ci sont, entre autres:
- dessins techniques 3Com
- manuels d’utilisations 2500
- fiches produit 3Com
- dépliants
- ou étiquettes-énergie 3Com 2500
Tous sont importants, mais les informations les plus importantes du point de vue de l'utilisation de l'appareil se trouvent dans le manuel d’utilisation 3Com 2500.

Un groupe de documents appelé manuels d’utilisation est également divisé en types plus spécifiques, tels que: Manuels d’installation 3Com 2500, manuels d’entretien, brefs manuels ou manuels de l’utilisateur 3Com 2500. Selon vos besoins, vous devriez chercher le document dont vous avez besoin. Sur notre site, vous pouvez voir le manuel le plus populaire d’utilisation du produit 3Com 2500.

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Manuel d’utilisation complet de l’appareil 3Com 2500, quelle devrait-elle être?
Le manuel d’utilisation, également appelé le mode d’emploi, ou tout simplement le manuel, est un document technique destiné à aider à utiliser 3Com 2500 par les utilisateurs. Des manuels sont généralement écrits par un rédacteur technique, mais dans un langage accessible à tous les utilisateurs 3Com 2500.

Le manuel d’utilisation complet 3Com, devrait inclure plusieurs éléments de base. Certains d'entre eux sont moins importants, tels que: la couverture / page de titre ou pages d'auteur. Cependant, la partie restante, devrait nous fournir des informations importantes du point de vue de l'utilisateur.

1. Introduction et des conseils sur la façon d'utiliser le manuel 3Com 2500 - Au début de chaque manuel, nous devrions trouver des indices sur la façon d'utiliser le document. Il doit contenir des informations sur l'emplacement de la table des matières 3Com 2500, FAQ ou des problèmes les plus fréquents - les points qui sont les plus souvent recherchés par les utilisateurs de chaque manuel
2. Table des matières - index de tous les conseils pour l3Com 2500 qui peuvent être trouvés dans le document courant
3. Conseils sur la façon d'utiliser les fonctions de base de l’appareil 3Com 2500 - qui devraient nous aider dans les premières étapes lors de l'utilisation 3Com 2500
4. Troubleshooting - séquence systématique des activités qui nous aideront à diagnostiquer et ensuite résoudre les principaux problèmes de 3Com 2500
5. FAQ - questions fréquemment posées
6. Détails du contact Informations sur l'endroit où chercher le contact avec le fabricant / service 3Com 2500 dans un pays donné, si le problème ne peut être résolu par nous-mêmes.

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