F
ExtremeWare XOS 11.1 Concepts Guide
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ESRP groups
An ESRP group runs multiple instances of ESRP within the same
VLAN (or broadcast domain). To provide redundancy at each tier, use
a pair of ESRP switches on the group.
ESRP instance
You enable ESRP on a per domain basis; each time you enable ESRP is
an ESRP instance.
ESRP VLAN
A VLAN that is part of an ESRP domain, with ESRP enabled, is an
ESRP VLAN.
Ethernet
This is the IEEE 802.3 networking standard that uses carrier sense
multiple access with collision detection (CSMA/CD). An Ethernet
device that wants to transmit first checks the channel for a carrier, and
if no carrier is sensed within a period of time, the device transmits. If
two devices transmit simultaneously, a collision occurs. This collision
is detected by all transmitting devices, which subsequently delay their
retransmissions for a random period. Ethernet runs at speeds from 10
Mbps to 10 Gbps on full duplex.
extended mode
ESRP extended mode supports and is compatible only with switches
running ExtremeWare XOS software exclusively.
F
Fast Convergence
In EAPS, Fast Convergence allows convergence in less than 50
milliseconds. You configure this parameter for the entire switch, not
by EAPS domain.
FDB
Forwarding database. The switch maintains a database of all MAC
address received on all of its ports and uses this information to decide
whether a frame should be forwarded or filtered. Each FDB entry
consists of the MAC address of the sending device, an identifier for
the port on which the frame was received, and an identifier for the
VLAN to which the device belongs. Frames destined for devices that
are not currently in the FDB are flooded to all members of the VLAN.
For some types of entries, you configure the time it takes for the
specific entry to age out of the FDB.
frame
This is the unit of transmission at the data link layer. The frame
contains the header and trailer information required by the physical
medium of transmission.
full-duplex
This is the communication mode in which a device simultaneously
sends and receives over the same link, doubling the bandwidth. Thus,
a full-duplex 100 Mbps connection has a bandwidth of 200 Mbps, and
so forth. A device either automatically adjusts its duplex mode to
match that of a connecting device or you can configure the duplex
mode; all devices at 1 Gbps or higher run
only
in full-duplex mode.
G
GBIC
Gigabit Interface Connector. These devices, available in a variety of
fiber modes and physical shapes, provide the physical interface to a
gigabit Ethernet connection.
E
(continued)
Summary of Contents for ExtremeWare XOS 11.1
Page 16: ...Contents ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 16...
Page 20: ...Preface ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 20...
Page 21: ...1 Using ExtremeWare XOS...
Page 22: ......
Page 78: ...Managing the ExtremeWare XOS Software ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 78...
Page 168: ...Virtual LANs ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 168...
Page 200: ...Policies and ACLs ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 200...
Page 252: ...Security ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 252...
Page 265: ...2 Using Switching and Routing Protocols...
Page 266: ......
Page 294: ...Ethernet Automatic Protection Switching ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 294...
Page 354: ...Extreme Standby Router Protocol ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 354...
Page 416: ...IP Multicast Routing ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 416...
Page 417: ...3 Appendixes...
Page 418: ......
Page 432: ...Software Upgrade and Boot Options ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 432...