System Summary
The System Summary provides a preview of the device status, hardware, firmware version, general PoE status, and other system information.
To view the system information, click Status and Statistics > System Summary.
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This chapter contains the following sections:
The System Summary provides a preview of the device status, hardware, firmware version, general PoE status, and other system information.
To view the system information, click Status and Statistics > System Summary.
The Interface page displays traffic statistics per port. This page is useful for analyzing the amount of traffic that is both sent and received, and its dispersion (Unicast, Multicast, and Broadcast).
To display Ethernet statistics and/or set the refresh rate, follow these steps:
Step 1 |
Click Status and Statistics > Interface. |
Step 2 |
To view statistics counters in table view or graphic view:
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Step 3 |
Enter the parameters.
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Step 4 |
In the Receive Statistics section, the following stats are displayed:
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Step 5 |
In the Transmit Statistics section, the following stats are displayed:
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The Etherlike page displays statistics per port according to the Etherlike MIB standard definition. The refresh rate of the information can be selected. This page provides more detailed information regarding errors in the physical layer (Layer 1) that might disrupt traffic.
To view Etherlike Statistics and/or set the refresh rate follow these steps:
Step 1 |
Click Status and Statistics > Etherlike. |
Step 2 |
To view statistics counters in table view, click View All Interfaces Statistics to see all ports in table view.
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Step 3 |
Enter the parameters.
The fields are displayed for the selected interface.
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Step 4 |
You can also click Refresh to refresh the stats or click Clear Interface Counters to clear the counters. |
This page displays the resources used by the device, such as Access Control Lists (ACL) and Quality of Service (QoS). Some applications allocate rules upon their initiation.
The count of each item may differ from different Models due to system design. Also, because of ASIC characteristics, it’s possible to show a "Lack of HW resources" when binding an Advance QoS service policy or User-defined ACL but this page shows enough TCAM resources.
To view the hardware resource utilization, click Status and Statistics > Hardware Resource Utilization.
The following fields are displayed:
Total Entries
Maximum—Number of available TCAM entries that can be used for whole system.
In Use—Number of TCAM entries used for whole system
System Rules
Allocated—Number of allocated TCAM entries that can be used for system rules.
In Use—Number of TCAM entries used for system rules.
ACL and QoS Rules
Allocated—Number of allocated TCAM entries that can be used for ACL and QoS rules.
In Use—Number of TCAM entries used for ACL and QoS rules.
The Health page monitors the temperature, and fan status on all relevant devices. The fans on the device vary based on the model.
Fan Status
Fan—Displays fan ID.
Status—Displays whether the fan is operating normally (OK) or not (Fault).
Speed (RPM)—Displays fan speed.
Temperature Status
Sensor—Displays sensor id.
Status—Displays one of the following options:
OK—The temperature is below the warning threshold.
Warning—The temperature is between the warning threshold to the critical threshold.
Critical—Temperature is above the critical threshold.
TEMP (°C) —Displays temperature of sensor.
The SPAN feature, which is sometimes called port mirroring or port monitoring, selects network traffic for analysis by a network analyzer. The network analyzer can be a Cisco Switch Probe device or other Remote Monitoring (RMON) probes.
Port mirroring is used on a network device to send a copy of network packets, seen on a single device port, multipledevice ports, or an entire VLAN, to a network monitoring connection on another port on the device. This is commonly used when monitoring of network traffic, such as for an intrusion-detection system, is required. A network analyzer, connected to the monitoring port, processes the data packets. A packet, which is received on a network port and assigned to a VLAN that is subject to mirroring, is mirrored to the analyzer port even if the packet was eventually trapped or discarded. Packets sent by the device are mirrored when Transmit (Tx) mirroring is activated.
RSPAN supports source ports, source VLANs, and destination ports on different switches, enabling remote monitoring of multiple switches across your network. The traffic for each RSPAN session is carried over a user-specified RSPAN VLAN that is dedicated for that RSPAN session in all participating switches. The RSPAN traffic from the source ports or VLANs is copied into the RSPAN VLAN and forwarded carrying the RSPAN VLAN to a destination session monitoring the RSPAN VLAN.
Mirroring does not guarantee that all traffic from the source port(s) is received on the analyzer (destination) port. If more data is sent to the analyzer port than it can support, some data might be lost.
An RSPAN VLAN carries SPAN traffic between RSPAN source and destination sessions.
To configure a VLAN as an RSPAN VLAN, follow these steps:
Step 1 |
Click Status and Statistics > SPAN > RSPAN VLAN. to view the previously defined RSPAN VLAN. |
Step 2 |
Select the RSPAN VLAN. |
Step 3 |
Click Apply. |
A monitoring session consists of one or more source ports and a single destination ports. A destination port must be configured on the start and final devices. On the start device, this is the reflector port. On the final device, it is the analyzer port.
To add a destination port, follow these steps:
Step 1 |
Click Status and Statistics >SPAN & RSPAN> Session Destinations. |
Step 2 |
Click Add. |
Step 3 |
Enter the following fields:
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Step 4 |
Click Apply. |
In a single local SPAN or RSPAN session source, you can monitor the port traffic, such as received (Rx), transmitted (Tx), or bidirectional (both). The switch supports any number of source ports (up to the maximum number of available ports on the switch) and any number of source VLANs.
To configure the source ports to be mirrored, follow these steps:
Step 1 |
Click Status and Statistics > SPAN and RSPAN > Session Sources. |
Step 2 |
Click Add. |
Step 3 |
Select the session number from Session ID. This must be the same for all source ports and the destination port. |
Step 4 |
In the Monitor Type field, select whether incoming, outgoing, or both types of traffic are mirrored.
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Step 5 |
Click Apply. The source interface for the mirroring is configured. |
Remote Networking Monitoring (RMON) enables an SNMP agent in the device to proactively monitor traffic statistics over a given period and send traps to an SNMP manager. The local SNMP agent compares actual, real-time counters against predefined thresholds and generates alarms, without the need for polling by a central SNMP management platform. This is an effective mechanism for proactive management, provided that you have set the correct thresholds relative to your network’s base line.
RMON decreases the traffic between the manager and the device since the SNMP manager does not have to poll the device frequently for information, and enables the manager to get timely status reports, since the device reports events as they occur.
With this feature, you can perform the following actions:
View the current statistics (from the time that the counter values cleared). You can also collect the values of these counters over a period of time, and then view the table of collected data, where each collected set is a single line of the History tab.
Define interesting changes in counter values, such as “reached a certain number of late collisions” (defines the alarm), and then specify what action to perform when this event occurs (log, trap, or log and trap).
The Statistics page displays detailed information regarding packet sizes and information regarding physical layer errors. The information is displayed according to the RMON standard. An oversized packet is defined as an Ethernet frame with the following criteria:
Packet length is greater than MRU byte size.
Collision event has not been detected.
Late collision event has not been detected.
Received (Rx) error event has not been detected.
Packet has a valid CRC.
To view RMON statistics and/or set the refresh rate, complete the following:
Step 1 |
Click Status and Statistics > RMON > Statistics. |
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Step 2 |
Select the Interface for which Ethernet statistics are to be displayed. |
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Step 3 |
Select the Refresh Rate, which is the time period that passes before the interface statistics are refreshed. The following statistics are displayed for the selected interface.
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Step 4 |
To view counters in table view:
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The RMON feature enables monitoring statistics per interface.
The History page defines the sampling frequency, amount of samples to store and the port from which to gather the data. After the data is sampled and stored, it appears in the History Table page that can be viewed by clicking History Table.
To enter RMON control information, complete the following:
Step 1 |
Click Status and Statistics > RMON > History. The fields displayed on this page are defined in the Add RMON History page, below. The only field is that is on this page and not defined in the Add page is:
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Step 2 |
Click Add. |
Step 3 |
Enter the parameters.
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Step 4 |
Click Apply. The entry is added to the History Control Table page, and the Running Configuration file is updated. |
Step 5 |
Click History Table to view the actual statistics. |
The Events page displays the log of events (actions) that occurred. Two types of events can be logged: Log or Log and Trap. The action in the event is performed when the event is bound to an alarm and the conditions of the alarm have occurred.
Step 1 |
Click Status and Statistics > RMON > Events. |
Step 2 |
Click Add. |
Step 3 |
Enter the parameters:
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Step 4 |
Click Apply.The RMON event is saved to the Running Configuration file. |
Step 5 |
Click Event Log Table to display the log of alarms that have occurred and that have been logged (see description below). |
RMON alarms provide a mechanism for setting thresholds and sampling intervals to generate exception events on counters or any other SNMP object counter maintained by the agent. Both the rising and falling thresholds must be configured in the alarm. After a rising threshold is crossed, no rising events are generated until the companion falling threshold is crossed. After a falling alarm is issued, the next alarm is issued when a rising threshold is crossed.
One or more alarms are bound to an event, which indicates the action to be taken when the alarm occurs.
Alarm counters can be monitored by either absolute values or changes (delta) in the counter values.
To enter RMON alarms, complete the following steps:
Step 1 |
Click Status and Statistics > RMON > Alarms. All previously defined alarms are displayed. The fields are described in the Add RMON Alarm page below. |
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Step 2 |
Click Add. |
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Step 3 |
Enter the parameters.
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Step 4 |
Click Apply. The RMON alarm is saved to the Running Configuration file. |
The device can write to the following logs:
Log in RAM (cleared during reboot).
Log in Flash memory (cleared only upon user command).
You can configure the messages that are written to each log by severity, and a message can go to more than one log, including logs that reside on external SYSLOG servers.
The RAM Memory page displays all messages that are saved in the RAM (cache) in chronological order. All entries are stored in the RAM log.
To view log entries, click Status and Statistics > View Log > RAM Memory.
The following are displayed at the top of the page:
Alert Icon Blinking—Toggles between disable and enable.
Current Logging Threshold—Specifies the levels of logging that are generated. This can be changed by clicking Edit by the field’s name.
This page contains the following fields for every log file:
Log Index—Log entry number
Log Time—Time when message was generated.
Severity—Event severity
Description—Message text describing the event
To clear the log messages, click Clear Logs.
The Flash Memory page displays the messages that stored in the Flash memory, in chronological order. The minimum severity for logging is configured in the Log Settings. Flash logs remain when the device is rebooted. You can clear the logs manually.
To view the Flash logs, click Status and Statistics > View Log > Flash Memory.
The Current Logging Threshold specifies the levels of logging that are generated. This can be changed by clicking Edit by the field’s name.
This page contains the following fields for each log file:
Log Index—Log entry number
Log Time—Time when message was generated.
Severity—Event severity
Description—Message text describing the event
To clear the messages, click Clear Logs. The messages are cleared.