Oam Features - Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series Configuration Manual

Release ios xe 3.3.0sg and ios 15.1(1)sg
Hide thumbs Also See for Catalyst 4500 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

About Ethernet OAM Protocol
Ethernet OAM has two major components:

OAM Features

These OAM features are defined by IEEE 802.3ah:
OAM Messages
Ethernet OAM messages or PDUs are standard length, untagged Ethernet frames between 64 and 1518
bytes. They do not go beyond a single hop and have a maximum transmission rate of 10 OAM PDUs per
second. Message types are information, event notification, loopback control, or vendor-specific OAM
PDUs.
Software Configuration Guide—Release IOS XE 3.3.0SG and IOS 15.1(1)SG
63-34
The OAM client establishes and manages Ethernet OAM on a link and enables and configures the
OAM sublayer. During the OAM discovery phase, the OAM client monitors OAM PDUs received
from the remote peer and enables OAM functionality. After the discovery phase, it manages the rules
of response to OAM PDUs and the OAM remote loopback mode.
The OAM sublayer presents two standard IEEE 802.3 MAC service interfaces facing the superior
and inferior MAC sublayers. It provides a dedicated interface for the OAM client to pass OAM
control information and PDUs to and from the client. The sublayer includes these components:
The control block provides the interface between the OAM client and other OAM sublayer
internal blocks.
The multiplexer manages frames from the MAC client, the control block, and the parser and
passes OAM PDUs from the control block and loopback frames from the parser to the
subordinate layer.
The parser classifies frames as OAM PDUs, MAC client frames, or loopback frames and sends
them to the appropriate entity: OAM PDUs to the control block, MAC client frames to the
superior sublayer, and loopback frames to the multiplexer.
Discovery identifies devices in the network and their OAM capabilities. It uses periodic OAM PDUs
to advertise OAM mode, configuration, and capabilities; PDU configuration; and platform identity.
An optional phase allows the local station to accept or reject the configuration of the peer OAM
entity.
Link monitoring detects and indicates link faults under a variety of conditions and uses the event
notification OAM PDU to notify the remote OAM device when it detects problems on the link. Error
events include when the number of symbol errors, the number of frame errors, the number of frame
errors within a specified number of frames, or the number of error seconds within a specified period
exceeding a configured threshold.
Remote failure indication conveys a slowly deteriorating quality of an OAM entity to its peers by
communicating these conditions: Link Fault means a loss of signal, Dying Gasp means an
unrecoverable condition, and Critical Event means an unspecified vendor-specific critical event. The
switch can receive and process but not generate Link Fault or Critical Event OAM PDUs. It can
generate Dying Gasp OAM PDUs to show that Ethernet OAM is disabled, the interface is shut down,
the interface enters the error-disabled state, or the switch is reloading. It can respond to, but not
generate, Dying Gasp PDUs based on loss of power.
Remote loopback mode ensures link quality with a remote peer during installation or
troubleshooting. In this mode, when the switch receives a frame that is not an OAM PDU or a pause
frame, it sends it back on the same port. The link appears to you to be functioning. You can use the
returned loopback acknowledgement to test delay, jitter, and throughput.
Chapter 63
Configuring Ethernet OAM and CFM
OL-25340-01

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents