Chapter 24 IP Source Guard
GS-2750 User’s Guide
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24.2 IP Source Guard
Use this screen to look at the current bindings for DHCP snooping and ARP inspection.
Bindings are used by DHCP snooping and ARP inspection to distinguish between authorized
and unauthorized packets in the network. The Switch learns the bindings by snooping DHCP
packets (dynamic bindings) and from information provided manually by administrators (static
bindings). To open this screen, click
Advanced Application > IP Source Guard
.
Figure 96
IP Source Guard
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
24.3 IP Source Guard Static Binding
Use this screen to manage static bindings for DHCP snooping and ARP inspection. Static
bindings are uniquely identified by the MAC address and VLAN ID. Each MAC address and
VLAN ID can only be in one static binding. If you try to create a static binding with the same
MAC address and VLAN ID as an existing static binding, the new static binding replaces the
original one. To open this screen, click
Advanced Application > IP Source Guard > Static
Binding
.
Table 69
IP Source Guard
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Index
This field displays a sequential number for each binding.
MAC Address
This field displays the source MAC address in the binding.
IP Address
This field displays the IP address assigned to the MAC address in the
binding.
Lease
This field displays how many days, hours, minutes, and seconds the
binding is valid; for example,
2d3h4m5s
means the binding is still valid for
2 days, 3 hours, 4 minutes and 5 seconds. This field displays
infinity
if the
binding is always valid (for example, a static binding).
Type
This field displays how the Switch learned the binding.
static
: This binding was learned from information provided manually by an
administrator.
dhcp-snooping
: This binding was learned by snooping DHCP packets.
VID
This field displays the source VLAN ID in the binding.
Port
This field displays the port number in the binding. If this field is blank, the
binding applies to all ports.
Summary of Contents for GS-2750
Page 2: ......
Page 7: ...Safety Warnings GS 2750 User s Guide 7 This product is recyclable Dispose of it properly ...
Page 8: ...Safety Warnings GS 2750 User s Guide 8 ...
Page 26: ...List of Figures GS 2750 User s Guide 26 ...
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Page 40: ...Chapter 2 Hardware Installation and Connection GS 2750 User s Guide 40 ...
Page 48: ...48 ...
Page 58: ...Chapter 4 The Web Configurator GS 2750 User s Guide 58 ...
Page 64: ...Chapter 5 Initial Setup Example GS 2750 User s Guide 64 ...
Page 70: ...Chapter 6 System Status and Port Statistics GS 2750 User s Guide 70 ...
Page 82: ...Chapter 7 Basic Setting GS 2750 User s Guide 82 ...
Page 84: ...84 ...
Page 120: ...Chapter 11 Spanning Tree Protocol GS 2750 User s Guide 120 ...
Page 134: ...Chapter 15 Link Aggregation GS 2750 User s Guide 134 ...
Page 144: ...Chapter 17 Port Security GS 2750 User s Guide 144 ...
Page 155: ...Chapter 19 Policy Rule GS 2750 User s Guide 155 Figure 73 Policy Example example ...
Page 156: ...Chapter 19 Policy Rule GS 2750 User s Guide 156 ...
Page 160: ...Chapter 20 Queuing Method GS 2750 User s Guide 160 ...
Page 166: ...Chapter 21 VLAN Stacking GS 2750 User s Guide 166 ...
Page 194: ...Chapter 23 Authentication Accounting GS 2750 User s Guide 194 ...
Page 220: ...220 ...
Page 232: ...Chapter 28 Differentiated Services GS 2750 User s Guide 232 ...
Page 242: ...Chapter 29 DHCP GS 2750 User s Guide 242 ...
Page 252: ...Chapter 30 VRRP GS 2750 User s Guide 252 ...
Page 254: ...254 ...
Page 278: ...Chapter 32 Access Control GS 2750 User s Guide 278 ...
Page 280: ...Chapter 33 Diagnostic GS 2750 User s Guide 280 ...
Page 284: ...Chapter 34 Syslog GS 2750 User s Guide 284 ...
Page 298: ...Chapter 39 Routing Table GS 2750 User s Guide 298 ...
Page 301: ...301 PART VI Product Specifications Product Specifications 303 ...
Page 302: ...302 ...
Page 310: ...310 ...
Page 322: ...Appendix B Legal Information GS 2750 User s Guide 322 ...
Page 328: ...Appendix C Customer Support GS 2750 User s Guide 328 ...