Mapping of Management Applications and Traffic Type
The following table summarizes the behavior of applications for various types of traffic when the
management egress interface selection feature is enabled.
Table 33. Mapping of Management Applications and Traffic Type
Traffic type /
Application
type
Switch initiated traffic
Switch-destined traffic
Transit Traffic
EIS
Management
Application
Management is the
preferred egress port
selected based on route
lookup in EIS table. If the
management port is down
or the route lookup fails,
packets are dropped.
If source TCP/UDP port matches a
management application and source
IP address is management port IP
address, management port is the
preferred egress port selected based
on route lookup in EIS table. If
management port is down or route
lookup fails, packets are dropped
Traffic from
management port
to data port and
from data port to
management port
is blocked
Non-EIS
management
application
Front-end default route
will take higher
precedence over
management default route
and SSH session to an
unknown destination uses
the front-end default route
only. No change in the
existing behavior.
If source TCP/UDP port matches a
management application and the
source IP address is a management
port IP address, the management
port is the preferred egress port
selected based on route lookup in
EIS table. If the management port is
down or the route lookup fails,
packets are dropped
Traffic from
management port
to data port and
from data port to
management port
is blocked
• EIS is enabled implies that EIS feature is enabled and the application might or might not be configured
as a management application
• EIS is disabled implies that either EIS feature itself is disabled or that the application is not configured
as a management application
Transit Traffic
This phenomenon occurs where traffic is transiting the switch. Traffic has not originated from the switch
and is not terminating on the switch.
• Drop the packets that are received on the front-end data port with destination on the management
port.
• Drop the packets that received on the management port with destination as the front-end data port.
Switch-Destined Traffic
This phenomenon occurs where traffic is terminated on the switch. Traffic has not originated from the
switch and is not transiting the switch.
The switch accepts all traffic destined to the switch, which is received on management or front-end data
port. Response traffic with management port IP address as source IP address is handled in the same
manner as switch originated traffic.
Switch-Originated Traffic
Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP)
425
Summary of Contents for S4820T
Page 1: ...Dell Configuration Guide for the S4820T System 9 8 0 0 ...
Page 282: ...Dell 282 Control Plane Policing CoPP ...
Page 622: ...Figure 81 Configuring Interfaces for MSDP 622 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP ...
Page 623: ...Figure 82 Configuring OSPF and BGP for MSDP Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP 623 ...
Page 629: ...Figure 86 MSDP Default Peer Scenario 2 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP 629 ...
Page 630: ...Figure 87 MSDP Default Peer Scenario 3 630 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP ...
Page 751: ...10 11 5 2 00 00 05 00 02 04 Member Ports Te 1 2 1 PIM Source Specific Mode PIM SSM 751 ...
Page 905: ...Figure 112 Single and Double Tag First byte TPID Match Service Provider Bridging 905 ...
Page 979: ...6 Member not present 7 Member not present Stacking 979 ...
Page 981: ...storm control Storm Control 981 ...
Page 1103: ...Figure 134 Setup OSPF and Static Routes Virtual Routing and Forwarding VRF 1103 ...