Port Monitoring; Important Points To Remember - Dell S4048–ON Configuration Manual

S-series 10gbe switches
Hide thumbs Also See for S4048–ON:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Port Monitoring

Port monitoring (also referred to as mirroring ) allows you to monitor ingress and/or egress traffic on specified ports. The mirrored
traffic can be sent to a port to which a network analyzer is connected to inspect or troubleshoot the traffic.
Mirroring is used for monitoring Ingress or Egress or both Ingress and Egress traffic on a specific port(s). This mirrored traffic can be
sent to a port where a network sniffer can connect and monitor the traffic.
Dell Networking OS supports the following mirroring techniques:
Port-Mirroring — Port Monitoring is a method of monitoring network traffic that forwards a copy of each incoming and outgoing
packet from one port of a network router to another port where the packet can be studied.
Remote Port Monitoring (RPM) — Remote Port Monitoring allows the user to monitor traffic running across a remote device in
the same network. Here the mirror traffic is carried over the L2 network, so that probe devices in the network can analyze it. It is
an extension to the normal Port Monitoring feature. This feature is generally referred as RPM, where mirror traffic is carried over
L2 network.
Encapsulated Remote-Port Monitoring (ERPM) — ERPM is a feature to encapsulate mirrored packet using GRE with IP delivery
so that it can be sent across a routed network.

Important Points to Remember

Port Monitoring is supported on both physical and logical interfaces like virtual area network (VLAN) and port-channel.
The monitored (the source, [MD]) and monitoring ports (the destination, [MG]) must be on the same switch.
In general, a monitoring port should have no ip address and no shutdown as the only configuration; Dell Networking OS permits a
limited set of commands for monitoring ports. You can display these commands using the ? command. A monitoring port also
may not be a member of a VLAN.
There may only be one destination port (MG) in a monitoring session.
Source port (MD) can be monitored by more than one destination port (MG).
Destination port (MG) can be a physical interface or port-channel interface.
A Port monitoring session can have multiple source statements.
Range command is supported in the source statement, where we can specify a range of interfaces of (Physical, Port Channel or
VLAN) types.
One Destination Port (MG) can be used in multiple sessions.
There can be a maximum of 128 source ports in a Port Monitoring session.
Flow based monitoring is supported for all type of source interfaces.
Source port (MD) can be a VLAN, where the VLAN traffic received on that port pipe where its members are present is
monitored
Single MD can be monitored on max. of 4 MG ports.
Port Monitoring
Port monitoring is supported on both physical and logical interfaces, such as VLAN and port-channel interfaces. The source port
(MD) with monitored traffic and the destination ports (MG) to which an analyzer can be attached must be on the same switch. You
can configure up to 128 source ports in a monitoring session. Only one destination port is supported in a monitoring session. The
S4048–ON supports multiple source-destination statements in a single monitor session.
The maximum number of source ports that can be supported in a session is 128.
The maximum number of destination ports that can be supported is 4 per port pipe.
644
Port Monitoring
40

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents