HP 1910 User Manual page 87

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Item
Description
Set the Medium Dependent Interface (MDI) mode of the port. Two types of Ethernet cables
can be used to connect Ethernet devices: crossover cable and straight-through cable. To
accommodate these two types of cables, an Ethernet port can operate in one of the
following three MDI modes: across, normal, and auto.
An Ethernet port is composed of eight pins. By default, each pin has its particular role. For
example, pin 1 and pin 2 are used for transmitting signals; pin 3 and pin 6 are used for
receiving signals. You can change the pin roles by setting the MDI mode.
MDI
To enable normal communication, you must connect the local transmit pins to the remote
receive pins. Therefore, you should configure the MDI mode depending on the cable
types.
Enable or disable flow control on the port.
With flow control enabled at both sides, when traffic congestion occurs on the ingress
port, the ingress port will send a Pause frame notifying the egress port to temporarily
suspend the sending of packets. The egress port is expected to stop sending any new
Flow Control
packet when it receives the Pause frame. In this way, flow control helps to avoid dropping
of packets.
Flow control works only after it is enabled on both the ingress and egress ports.
Enable or disable auto power down on the port.
With auto power down enabled, when an Ethernet port does not receive any packet for
a certain period of time, it automatically enters the power save mode and resumes its
Power Save
normal state upon the arrival of a packet.
Support for this configuration item varies with device models.
Set the MAC learning limit on the port. Available options include:
Max MAC Count
For an Ethernet port in across mode, pin 1 and pin 2 are used for transmitting signals;
pin 3 and pin 6 are used for receiving signals. The pin roles are not changed.
For an Ethernet port in auto mode, the pin roles are decided through auto negotiation.
For an Ethernet port in normal mode, the pin roles are changed. Pin 1 and pin 2 are
used for receiving signals; pin 3 and pin 6 are used for transmitting signals.
Normally, the auto mode is recommended. The other two modes are used only when
the device cannot determine the cable type.
When straight-through cables are used, the local MDI mode must be different from the
remote MDI mode.
When crossover cables are used, the local MDI mode must be the same as the remote
MDI mode, or the MDI mode of at least one end must be set to auto.
IMPORTANT:
IMPORTANT:
User Defined—Select this option to set the limit manually.
No Limited—Select this option to set no limit.
26

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