973
Cisco Systems, Inc.
www.cisco.com
Dying Gasp
This chapter describes the Dying-Gasp feature for the Cisco Industrial Ethernet series switches.
Dying Gasp resides on a hardware component on the High-performance WAN Interface Card (HWIC) and supports
Gigabit Ethernet interfaces. The networking devices rely on a temporary back-up power supply on a capacitor, that allows
for a graceful shutdown and the generation of the dying-gasp message. This temporary power supply is designed to last
from 10 to 20 milliseconds to perform these tasks.
Dying-Gasp packets are created when you configure the host by using the
dying-gasp
configuration command. The
show dying-gasp packets
command displays the detailed information about the created packets.
The SNMP server for the SNMP Dying Gasp message is specified through the
snmp-server host
configuration
command. The syslog server sending the syslog Dying Gasp message is specified through the
logging host
hostname-or-ipaddress transport udp
command. The Ethernet-OAM Dying Gasp packets are created for interfaces
where Ethernet-OAM is enabled.
Dying Gasp packets can be sent to a maximum number of 5 servers for each notification type.
For more information about configuring Dying Gasp, see the Configuring Dying Gasp chapter of the System Management
guide at this URL:
Summary of Contents for IE 4000
Page 12: ...8 Configuration Overview Default Settings After Initial Switch Configuration ...
Page 52: ...48 Configuring Interfaces Monitoring and Maintaining the Interfaces ...
Page 108: ...104 Configuring Switch Clusters Additional References ...
Page 128: ...124 Performing Switch Administration Additional References ...
Page 130: ...126 Configuring PTP ...
Page 140: ...136 Configuring CIP Additional References ...
Page 146: ...142 Configuring SDM Templates Configuration Examples for Configuring SDM Templates ...
Page 192: ...188 Configuring Switch Based Authentication Additional References ...
Page 244: ...240 Configuring IEEE 802 1x Port Based Authentication Additional References ...
Page 298: ...294 Configuring VLANs Additional References ...
Page 336: ...332 Configuring STP Additional References ...
Page 408: ...404 Configuring DHCP Additional References ...
Page 450: ...446 Configuring IGMP Snooping and MVR Additional References ...
Page 490: ...486 Configuring SPAN and RSPAN Additional References ...
Page 502: ...498 Configuring Layer 2 NAT ...
Page 770: ...766 Configuring IPv6 MLD Snooping Related Documents ...
Page 930: ...926 Configuring IP Unicast Routing Related Documents ...
Page 976: ...972 Configuring Cisco IOS IP SLAs Operations Additional References ...
Page 978: ...974 Dying Gasp ...
Page 990: ...986 Configuring Enhanced Object Tracking Monitoring Enhanced Object Tracking ...
Page 994: ...990 Configuring MODBUS TCP Displaying MODBUS TCP Information ...
Page 996: ...992 Ethernet CFM ...
Page 1066: ...1062 Using an SD Card SD Card Alarms ...