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786
Snooping and Inspecting Traffic
What is Dynamic ARP Inspection?
Dynamic ARP Inspection (DAI) is a security feature that rejects invalid and
malicious ARP packets. DAI prevents a class of man-in-the-middle attacks
where an unfriendly station intercepts traffic for other stations by poisoning
the ARP caches of its unsuspecting neighbors. The malicious attacker sends
ARP requests or responses mapping another station’s IP address to its own
MAC address.
When DAI is enabled, the switch drops ARP packets whose sender MAC
address and sender IP address do not match an entry in the DHCP snooping
bindings database. You can optionally configure additional ARP packet
validation.
When DAI is enabled on a VLAN, DAI is enabled on the interfaces (physical
ports or LAGs) that are members of that VLAN. Individual interfaces are
configured as trusted or untrusted. The trust configuration for DAI is
independent of the trust configuration for DHCP snooping.
Optional DAI Features
If the network administrator has configured the option, DAI verifies that the
sender MAC address equals the source MAC address in the Ethernet header.
There is a configurable option to verify that the target MAC address equals
the destination MAC address in the Ethernet header. This check applies only
to ARP responses, since the target MAC address is unspecified in ARP
requests. You can also enable IP address checking. When this option is
enabled, DAI drops ARP packets with an invalid IP address. The following IP
addresses are considered invalid:
• 0.0.0.0
• 255.255.255.255
• all IP multicast addresses
• all class E addresses (240.0.0.0/4)
• loopback addresses (in the range 127.0.0.0/8)
Summary of Contents for PowerConnect M6220
Page 52: ...52 Introduction ...
Page 86: ...86 Switch Features ...
Page 100: ...100 Hardware Overview ...
Page 116: ...116 Using the Command Line Interface ...
Page 121: ...Default Settings 121 ...
Page 122: ...122 Default Settings ...
Page 142: ...142 Setting Basic Network Information ...
Page 206: ...206 Configuring Authentication Authorization and Accounting ...
Page 292: ...292 Managing General System Settings Figure 11 31 Verify MOTD ...
Page 296: ...296 Managing General System Settings ...
Page 332: ...332 Configuring SNMP ...
Page 408: ...408 Monitoring Switch Traffic ...
Page 560: ...560 Configuring Access Control Lists ...
Page 591: ...Configuring VLANs 591 Figure 21 17 GVRP Port Parameters Table ...
Page 597: ...Configuring VLANs 597 Figure 21 24 Double VLAN Port Parameter Table ...
Page 693: ...Configuring Port Based Traffic Control 693 Figure 24 3 Storm Control 5 Click Apply ...
Page 780: ...780 Configuring Connectivity Fault Management ...
Page 804: ...804 Snooping and Inspecting Traffic Figure 27 17 DAI Interface Configuration Summary ...
Page 818: ...818 Snooping and Inspecting Traffic ...
Page 836: ...836 Configuring Link Aggregation ...
Page 860: ...860 Configuring Data Center Bridging Features ...
Page 906: ...906 Configuring DHCP Server Settings ...
Page 940: ...940 Configuring L2 and L3 Relay Features Figure 34 3 DHCP Relay Interface Summary ...
Page 1080: ...1080 Configuring VRRP ...
Page 1104: ...1104 Configuring IPv6 Routing ...
Page 1131: ...Configuring Differentiated Services 1131 Figure 40 5 DiffServ Class Criteria ...
Page 1158: ...1158 Configuring Class of Service Figure 41 1 Mapping Table Configuration CoS 802 1P ...
Page 1174: ...1174 Configuring Auto VoIP Figure 42 2 Auto VoIP Interface Configuration ...
Page 1240: ...1240 Managing IPv4 and IPv6 Multicast Figure 43 51 DVMRP Next Hop Summary ...
Page 1266: ...1266 Managing IPv4 and IPv6 Multicast ...
Page 1274: ...1274 System Process Definitions ...
Page 1294: ...1294 Index ...