Port Classification; Port Classification Overview; Port Classification Cli Commands - Avaya G350 Administration

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Configuring advanced switching

Port classification

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Forwarding
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Port classification
This section provides information on configuring port classification on the G350 and includes the
following topics:

Port classification overview

Port classification CLI commands

configure port classification on the G350
Port classification configuration examples
Port classification overview
With the G350, you can classify any port as either regular or valuable. Classifying a port as valuable
means that a link fault trap is sent in the event of a link failure. The trap is sent even when the port is
disabled. This feature is particularly useful for the port redundancy application, where you need to be
informed about a link failure on the dormant port.
Port classification CLI commands
Use the following commands to configure port classification. For more information about these
commands, see Avaya G350 Media Gateway CLI Reference, 555-245-202.
Use the
valuable. Any change in the Spanning Tree state from Forwarding for a valuable port will erase
all learned MAC addresses in the switch.
Use the
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— an overview of port classification on the G350
— a list and description of the CLI commands used to
command to set the port classification to either regular or
set port classification
command to display a port's classification.
show port classification
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— examples of port classification configurations
Administration of the Avaya G350 Media Gateway
June 2004

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