Mac Table; Chapter 12 Mac Table; Mac Table Overview; What You Can Do - ZyXEL Communications XS3800-28 User Manual

28-port 10gbe l3 managed switch
Hide thumbs Also See for XS3800-28:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

12.1 MAC Table Overview

This chapter introduces the MAC Table screen.
The MAC Table screen (a MAC table is also known as a filtering database) shows how frames are
forwarded or filtered across the Switch's ports. When a device (which may belong to a VLAN group)
sends a packet which is forwarded to a port on the Switch, the MAC address of the device is shown on
the Switch's MAC Table. It also shows whether the MAC address is dynamic (learned by the Switch) or
static (manually entered in the SWITCHING > Static MAC Forwarding screen).

12.1.1 What You Can Do

Use the MAC Table screen
static.

12.1.2 What You Need to Know

The Switch uses the MAC Table to determine how to forward frames. See the following figure.
The Switch examines a received frame and learns the port on which this source MAC address came.
1
The Switch checks to see if the frame's destination MAC address matches a source MAC address
2
already learned in the MAC Table.
• If the Switch has already learned the port for this MAC address, then it forwards the frame to that port.
• If the Switch has not already learned the port for this MAC address, then the frame is flooded to all
ports. Too much port flooding leads to network congestion, then the Switch sends an ARP to request
the MAC address. The Switch then learns the port that replies with the MAC address.
• If the Switch has already learned the port for this MAC address, but the destination port is the same as
the port it came in on, then it filters the frame.

Chapter 12 MAC Table

(Section 12.2 on page
119) to check whether the MAC address is dynamic or
XS3800-28 User's Guide
118
C
H A P T E R

MAC Table

12

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents