Chapter 1
| Introduction
Description of Software Features
– 32 –
Static MAC 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.
IP Address Filtering
Access to insecure ports can be controlled using DHCP Snooping which filters
ingress traffic based on static IP addresses and addresses stored in the DHCP
Snooping table. Traffic can also be restricted to specific source IP addresses or
source IP/MAC address pairs based on static entries or entries stored in the DHCP
Snooping table.
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 16K 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 12 Mbits for
frame buffering. This buffer can queue packets awaiting transmission on congested
networks.
Spanning Tree
Algorithm
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 the chosen path should fail for any
reason, an alternate path will be activated to maintain the connection.
◆
Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP, IEEE 802.1w) – This protocol reduces the
convergence time for network topology changes to about 3 to 5 seconds,
compared to 30 seconds or more for the older IEEE 802.1D STP standard. It is
intended as a complete replacement for STP, but can still interoperate with
switches running the older standard by automatically reconfiguring ports to
STP-compliant mode if they detect STP protocol messages from attached
devices.
◆
Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP, IEEE 802.1s) – This protocol is a direct
extension of RSTP. It can provide an independent spanning tree for different
VLANs. It simplifies network management, provides for even faster
convergence than RSTP by limiting the size of each region, and prevents VLAN
Содержание GEL-1061
Страница 14: ...Contents 14...
Страница 28: ...Section I Getting Started 28...
Страница 38: ...Chapter 1 Introduction System Defaults 38...
Страница 40: ...Section II Web Configuration 40...
Страница 60: ...Chapter 2 Using the Web Interface Navigating the Web Browser Interface 60...
Страница 164: ...Chapter 6 Address Table Settings Issuing MAC Address Traps 164...
Страница 192: ...Chapter 8 Congestion Control Storm Control 192...
Страница 204: ...Chapter 9 Class of Service Layer 3 4 Priority Settings 204...
Страница 216: ...Chapter 10 Quality of Service Attaching a Policy Map to a Port 216...
Страница 430: ...Chapter 14 Multicast Filtering MLD Snooping Snooping and Query for IPv4 430...
Страница 436: ...Chapter 15 IP Tools Address Resolution Protocol 436...
Страница 450: ...Chapter 16 IP Services Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol 450 Figure 301 Enabling Dynamic Provisioning via DHCP...
Страница 474: ...Section III Appendices 474...
Страница 492: ...Glossary 492...
Страница 500: ...E052016 ST R02 150200001416A...