Chapter 15
| IP Tools
Using the Trace Route Function
– 433 –
Using the Trace Route Function
Use the Tools > Trace Route page to show the route packets take to the specified
destination.
Parameters
These parameters are displayed:
◆
Destination IP Address
– Alias or IPv4/IPv6 address of the host.
◆
IPv4 Max Failures
– The maximum number of failures before which the trace
route is terminated. (Fixed: 5)
◆
IPv6 Max Failures
– The maximum number of failures before which the trace
route is terminated. (Range: 1-255; Default: 5)
Command Usage
◆
Use the trace route function to determine the path taken to reach a specified
destination.
◆
A trace terminates when the destination responds, when the maximum
timeout (TTL) is exceeded, or the maximum number of hops is exceeded.
◆
The trace route function first sends probe datagrams with the TTL value set at
one. This causes the first router to discard the datagram and return an error
message. The trace function then sends several probe messages at each
subsequent TTL level and displays the round-trip time for each message. Not all
devices respond correctly to probes by returning an “ICMP port unreachable”
message. If the timer goes off before a response is returned, the trace function
prints a series of asterisks and the “Request Timed Out” message. A long
sequence of these messages, terminating only when the maximum timeout
has been reached, may indicate this problem with the target device.
◆
The same link-local address may be used by different interfaces/nodes in
different zones (RFC 4007). Therefore, when specifying a link-local address,
include zone-id information indicating the VLAN identifier after the % delimiter.
For example, FE80::7272%1 identifies VLAN 1 as the interface from which the
trace route is sent.
Web Interface
To trace the route to another device on the network:
1.
Click Tools, Trace Route.
2.
Specify the target device.
3.
Click Apply.
Summary of Contents for GEL-1061
Page 14: ...Contents 14...
Page 28: ...Section I Getting Started 28...
Page 38: ...Chapter 1 Introduction System Defaults 38...
Page 40: ...Section II Web Configuration 40...
Page 60: ...Chapter 2 Using the Web Interface Navigating the Web Browser Interface 60...
Page 164: ...Chapter 6 Address Table Settings Issuing MAC Address Traps 164...
Page 192: ...Chapter 8 Congestion Control Storm Control 192...
Page 204: ...Chapter 9 Class of Service Layer 3 4 Priority Settings 204...
Page 216: ...Chapter 10 Quality of Service Attaching a Policy Map to a Port 216...
Page 430: ...Chapter 14 Multicast Filtering MLD Snooping Snooping and Query for IPv4 430...
Page 436: ...Chapter 15 IP Tools Address Resolution Protocol 436...
Page 474: ...Section III Appendices 474...
Page 492: ...Glossary 492...
Page 500: ...E052016 ST R02 150200001416A...