HP 3100 v2 Series Command Reference Manual page 17

Hide thumbs Also See for 3100 v2 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Field
aborts
ignored
- parity errors
Output (total): 0 packets, 0 bytes
0 unicasts, 0 broadcasts, 0
multicasts, 0 pauses
Output (normal): 0 packets, - bytes
0 unicasts, 0 broadcasts, 0
multicasts, 0 pauses
output errors
- underruns
- buffer failures
aborts
deferred
collisions
late collisions
lost carrier
- no carrier
NOTE:
If an output field is not available, a hyphen (-) is displayed.
Description
Total number of illegal inbound packets:
Fragment frames—CRC error frames shorter than 64 bytes.
The length can be an integral or non-integral value.
Jabber frames—CRC error frames greater than the maximum
frame length supported on the Ethernet interface (with an
integral or non-integral length). For an Ethernet interface that
does not permit jumbo frames, jabber frames refer to CRC error
frames greater than 1518 bytes (without VLAN tags) or 1522
bytes (with VLAN tags). For an Ethernet interface that permits
jumbo frames, jabber frames refer to CRC error frames greater
than the maximum length of Ethernet frames that are allowed to
pass through the interface (which is configured when you
configure jumbo frame support on the interface).
Symbol error frames—Frames that contained at least one
undefined symbol.
Unknown operation code frames—Non-pause MAC control
frames
Length error frames—Frames whose 802.3 length fields did
not accord with the actual frame length (46 to 1500 bytes).
Number of inbound frames dropped because the receive buffer of
the port ran low.
Total number of frames with parity errors.
Outbound traffic statistics (in packets and bytes) for the port. All
outbound normal and abnormal packets (including unicast,
broadcast, and multicast), and pause frames were counted.
Outbound normal traffic (including unicast, broadcast, and multicast)
and pause frame statistics (in packets and bytes) for the interface.
Outbound packets with errors.
Number of packet drops because the output rate of the interface
exceeded the output queuing capability. This is a low-probability
hardware anomaly.
Number of packets dropped because the transmit buffer of the
interface ran low.
Number of packets that failed to be transmitted, for example,
because of Ethernet collisions.
Number of frames that the interface deferred to transmit because of
detected collisions.
Number of frames that the interface stopped transmitting because
Ethernet collisions were detected during transmission.
Number of frames that the interface deferred to transmit after
transmitting their first 512 bits, because of detected collisions.
Number of carrier losses during transmission. This counter applies
to serial WAN interfaces.
Number of times that the port failed to detect the carrier when
attempting to send frames. This counter applies to serial WAN
interfaces.
10

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents