1042
C
HAPTER
85: D
EVICE
M
ANAGEMENT
Identifying and
Diagnosing Pluggable
Transceivers
Introduction to pluggable transceivers
At present, four types of pluggable transceivers are commonly used, and they can
be divided into optical transceivers and electrical transceivers based on
transmission media as shown in Table 87.
n
For pluggable transceivers supported by Switch 4800Gs-HI series Ethernet
switches, refer to 3Com Switch 7750 Family, Switch 4800Gs-HI Series Installation
Manuals.
Identifying pluggable transceivers
As pluggable transceivers are of various types and from different vendors, you can
perform the following configurations to identify main parameters of the pluggable
transceivers, including transceiver type, connector type, central wavelength of the
laser sent, transfer distance and vendor name or vendor name specified.
Follow these steps to identify pluggable transceivers:
■
You can use the
Vendor Name
field in the prompt information of the
display
transceiver interface
command to identify an anti-spoofing pluggable
transceiver customized by 3Com. If the field is
3Com
, it is considered an
3Com-customized pluggable transceiver.
■
Electrical label information is also called permanent configuration data or
archive information, which is written to the storage device of a module during
device debugging or test. The information includes name of the module,
device serial number, and vendor name or vendor name specified.
Diagnosing pluggable transceivers
The system outputs alarm information for you to diagnose and troubleshoot faults
of pluggable transceivers. Optical transceivers customized by 3Com also support
the digital diagnosis function, which enables a transceiver to monitor the main
Table 87
Commonly used pluggable transceivers
Transceiver type
Applied environment
Whether can be an
optical transceiver
Whether can be an
electrical transceiver
SFP (Small Form-factor Pluggable)
Generally used for 100M/1000M Ethernet
interfaces or POS 155M/622M/2.5G
interfaces
Yes Yes
GBIC (GigaBit Interface Converter)
Generally used for 1000M Ethernet
interfaces
Yes Yes
XFP (10-Gigabit small Form-factor
Pluggable)
Generally used for 10G Ethernet interfaces
Yes
No
XENPAK (10 Gigabit EtherNet
Transceiver Package)
Generally used for 10G Ethernet interfaces
Yes
Yes
To do…
Use the command…
Remarks
Display main parameters of the
pluggable transceiver(s)
display transceiver interface
[
interface-type
interface-number
]
Available for all pluggable
transceivers
Display part of the electrical
label information of the
anti-spoofing transceiver(s)
customized by 3Com
display transceiver
manuinfo interface
[
interface-type
interface-number
]
Available for anti-spoofing
pluggable transceiver(s)
customized by 3Com only
Summary of Contents for 4800G Series
Page 26: ...26 CHAPTER NETWORKING APPLICATIONS ...
Page 30: ...30 CHAPTER 1 LOGGING IN TO AN ETHERNET SWITCH ...
Page 62: ...62 CHAPTER 3 LOGGING IN THROUGH TELNET ...
Page 70: ...70 CHAPTER 5 LOGGING IN THROUGH WEB BASED NETWORK MANAGEMENT SYSTEM ...
Page 72: ...72 CHAPTER 6 LOGGING IN THROUGH NMS ...
Page 82: ...82 CHAPTER 8 CONTROLLING LOGIN USERS ...
Page 98: ...98 CHAPTER 9 VLAN CONFIGURATION ...
Page 108: ...108 CHAPTER 10 VOICE VLAN CONFIGURATION ...
Page 119: ...GVRP Configuration Examples 119 DeviceB display vlan dynamic No dynamic vlans exist ...
Page 120: ...120 CHAPTER 11 GVRP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 160: ...160 CHAPTER 17 PORT ISOLATION CONFIGURATION ...
Page 172: ...172 CHAPTER 19 LINK AGGREGATION CONFIGURATION ...
Page 196: ...196 CHAPTER 22 DLDP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 240: ...240 CHAPTER 23 MSTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 272: ...272 CHAPTER 27 RIP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 364: ...364 CHAPTER 29 IS IS CONFIGURATION ...
Page 426: ...426 CHAPTER 31 ROUTING POLICY CONFIGURATION ...
Page 442: ...442 CHAPTER 33 IPV6 RIPNG CONFIGURATION ...
Page 466: ...466 CHAPTER 35 IPV6 IS IS CONFIGURATION ...
Page 488: ...488 CHAPTER 36 IPV6 BGP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 498: ...498 CHAPTER 37 ROUTING POLICY CONFIGURATION ...
Page 540: ...540 CHAPTER 40 TUNNELING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 552: ...552 CHAPTER 41 MULTICAST OVERVIEW ...
Page 604: ...604 CHAPTER 43 MLD SNOOPING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 628: ...628 CHAPTER 46 IGMP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 700: ...700 CHAPTER 48 MSDP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 812: ...812 CHAPTER 57 DHCP SERVER CONFIGURATION ...
Page 822: ...822 CHAPTER 58 DHCP RELAY AGENT CONFIGURATION ...
Page 834: ...834 CHAPTER 61 BOOTP CLIENT CONFIGURATION ...
Page 850: ...850 CHAPTER 63 IPV4 ACL CONFIGURATION ...
Page 856: ...856 CHAPTER 64 IPV6 ACL CONFIGURATION ...
Page 860: ...860 CHAPTER 65 QOS OVERVIEW ...
Page 868: ...868 CHAPTER 66 TRAFFIC CLASSIFICATION TP AND LR CONFIGURATION ...
Page 888: ...888 CHAPTER 69 PRIORITY MAPPING ...
Page 894: ...894 CHAPTER 71 TRAFFIC MIRRORING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 904: ...904 CHAPTER 72 PORT MIRRORING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 930: ...930 CHAPTER 74 UDP HELPER CONFIGURATION ...
Page 990: ...990 CHAPTER 79 FILE SYSTEM MANAGEMENT CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1000: ...1000 CHAPTER 80 FTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1020: ...1020 CHAPTER 82 INFORMATION CENTER CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1038: ...1038 CHAPTER 84 SYSTEM MAINTAINING AND DEBUGGING ...
Page 1046: ...1046 CHAPTER 85 DEVICE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 1129: ...SSH Client Configuration Examples 1129 SwitchB ...
Page 1130: ...1130 CHAPTER 88 SSH CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1160: ...1160 CHAPTER 90 RRPP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1180: ...1180 CHAPTER 91 PORT SECURITY CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1192: ...1192 CHAPTER 92 LLDP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1202: ...1202 CHAPTER 93 POE CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1218: ...1218 CHAPTER 96 HTTPS CONFIGURATION ...