Behavior Of Various Applications For Switch-Initiated Traffic - Dell Z9000 Configuration Manual

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This phenomenon occurs where traffic is transiting the switch. Traffic has not originated from the switch
and is not terminating on the switch.
Drop the packets that are received on the front-end data port with destination on the management
port.
Drop the packets that received on the management port with destination as the front-end data port.
Switch-Destined Traffic
This phenomenon occurs where traffic is terminated on the switch. Traffic has not originated from the
switch and is not transiting the switch.
The switch accepts all traffic destined to the switch, which is received on management or front-end data
port. Response traffic with management port IP address as source IP address is handled in the same
manner as switch originated traffic.
Switch-Originated Traffic
This phenomenon occurs where traffic is originating from the switch.
1.
Management Applications (Applications that are configured as management applications):
The management port is an egress port for management applications. If the management port is
down or the destination is not reachable through the management port (next hop ARP is not
resolved, and so on), and if the destination is reachable through a data port, then the management
application traffic is sent out through the front-end data port. This fallback mechanism is required.
2.
Non-Management Applications (Applications that are not configured as management applications as
defined by this feature):
Non-management application traffic exits out of either front-end data port or management port
based on routing table. If there is a default route on both the management and front-end data port,
the default for the data port is preferred route.

Behavior of Various Applications for Switch-Initiated Traffic

This section describes the different system behaviors that occur when traffic is originating from the
switch:
EIS Behavior: If the destination TCP/UDP port matches a configured management application, a route
lookup is done in the EIS table and the management port gets selected as the egress port. If management
port is down or the route lookup fails, packets are dropped.
EIS Behavior for ICMP: ICMP packets do not have TCP/UDP ports. To do an EIS route lookup for ICMP-
based applications (ping and traceroute) using the source ip option, the management port IP address
should be specified as the source IP address. If management port is down or route lookup fails, packets
are dropped.
Default Behavior: Route lookup is done in the default routing table and appropriate egress port is
selected.
312
Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP)

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