
Description of Software Features
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enabled to control network traffic during periods of congestion and prevent the loss
of packets when port buffer thresholds are exceeded. The switch supports flow
control based on the IEEE 802.3x standard.
Rate Limiting
– This feature controls the maximum rate for traffic transmitted or
received on an interface. Rate limiting is configured on interfaces at the edge of a
network to limit traffic into or out of the network. Packets that exceed the acceptable
amount of traffic are dropped.
Port Mirroring
– The switch can unobtrusively mirror traffic from any port to a
monitor port. You can then attach a protocol analyzer or RMON probe to this port to
perform traffic analysis and verify connection integrity.
Port Trunking
– Ports can be combined into an aggregate connection. Trunks can
be manually set up or dynamically configured using IEEE 802.3-2005 (formerly
IEEE 802.3ad) Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP). The additional ports
dramatically increase the throughput across any connection, and provide
redundancy by taking over the load if a port in the trunk should fail. The switch
supports up to 8 trunks.
Broadcast Storm Control
– Broadcast suppression prevents broadcast traffic from
overwhelming the network. When enabled on a port, the level of broadcast traffic
passing through the port is restricted. If broadcast traffic rises above a pre-defined
threshold, it will be throttled until the level falls back beneath the threshold.
Static Addresses
– A static address can be assigned to a specific interface on this
switch. Static addresses are bound to the assigned interface and will not be moved.
When a static address is seen on another interface, the address will be ignored and
will not be written to the address table. Static addresses can be used to provide
network security by restricting access for a known host to a specific port.
IEEE 802.1D Bridge
– The switch supports IEEE 802.1D transparent bridging. The
address table facilitates data switching by learning addresses, and then filtering or
forwarding traffic based on this information. The address table supports up to 8K
addresses.
Store-and-Forward Switching
– The switch copies each frame into its memory
before forwarding them to another port. This ensures that all frames are a standard
Ethernet size and have been verified for accuracy with the cyclic redundancy check
(CRC). This prevents bad frames from entering the network and wasting bandwidth.
To avoid dropping frames on congested ports, the switch provides 1.5 MB for frame
buffering. This buffer can queue packets awaiting transmission on congested
networks.
Spanning Tree Protocol
– The switch supports these spanning tree protocols:
Spanning Tree Protocol (STP, IEEE 802.1D) – This protocol provides loop detection.
When there are multiple physical paths between segments, this protocol will choose
a single path and disable all others to ensure that only one route exists between any
two stations on the network. This prevents the creation of network loops. However, if
Summary of Contents for ES4524M-PoE
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Page 4: ...ES4524M PoE F1 0 0 5 E012008 ST R01 149100037400A...
Page 22: ...xviii Tables...
Page 26: ...xxii Figures...
Page 34: ...Introduction 1 8 1...
Page 270: ...Configuring the Switch 3 226...
Page 404: ...Command Line Interface 4 134 4...
Page 546: ...Software Specifications A 4 A...
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