RMON and Your Switch
207
RMON and Your
Switch
Your Switch contains an RMON probe in its management software.
Table 10
details the RMON support provided by this probe.
When using the RMON features of the Switch, you should note the
following:
■
After the default sessions are created, they have no special status. You
can delete or change them as required.
■
The Switch can forward a very large volume of packets per second.
The Statistics RMON group is able to monitor every packet, but the
other groups sample a maximum of 200,000 packets a second.
■
The greater the number of RMON sessions, the greater the burden on
the management resources of the Switch. If you have many RMON
Table 10
RMON support supplied by the Switch
RMON group
Support supplied by the Switch
Statistics
A new or initialized Switch has one Statistics session per port.
History
A new or initialized Switch has two History sessions per port. These
sessions provide the data for the unit and port graphs of the web
interface:
■
30 second intervals, 10 historical samples stored
■
30 minute intervals, 10 historical samples stored
Alarms
Although up to 200 alarms can be defined for the Switch, a new
or initialized Switch has two alarms defined for each port:
■
Broadcast bandwidth used
■
Percentage of errors over one minute
You can modify these alarms using an RMON management
application, but you cannot create or delete them.
For more information about the alarms setup on the Switch, see
“The Alarm Events”
on
page 208
and
“The Default Alarm
Settings”
on
page 208
.
Hosts
Although Hosts is supported by the Switch, there are no Hosts
sessions defined on a new or initialized Switch.
Hosts Top N
Although Hosts Top N is supported by the Switch, there are no
Hosts Top N sessions defined on a new or initialized Switch.
Matrix
Although Matrix is supported by the Switch, there are no Matrix
sessions defined on a new or initialized Switch.
Events
A new or initialized Switch has events defined for use with the
default alarm system, see
“The Default Alarm Settings”
on
page 208
for more information.
Summary of Contents for SuperStack II
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Page 154: ...154 CHAPTER 4 WORKING WITH THE COMMAND LINE INTERFACE ...
Page 156: ......
Page 162: ...162 CHAPTER 5 PORT TRUNKS ...
Page 169: ...VLANs and Your Switch 169 Figure 32 Forwarding unknown 802 1Q tags ...
Page 173: ...VLAN Configuration for Beginners 173 Figure 34 Simple example Untagged connections using hubs ...
Page 180: ...180 CHAPTER 6 VIRTUAL LANS VLANS ...
Page 188: ...188 CHAPTER 7 FASTIP ...
Page 200: ...200 CHAPTER 9 SPANNING TREE PROTOCOL Figure 49 STP configurations ...
Page 210: ...210 CHAPTER 10 RMON ...
Page 211: ...IV PROBLEM SOLVING Chapter 11 Problem Solving ...
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Page 224: ...224 CHAPTER 11 PROBLEM SOLVING ...
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