Span Destinations; Characteristics Of Destination Ports; Configuring Span - Cisco N5010P-N2K-BE Software Configuration Manual

Nx-os software configuration guide
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SPAN Destinations

S e n d f e e d b a c k t o n x 5 0 0 0 - d o c f e e d b a c k @ c i s c o . c o m
SPAN Destinations
SPAN destinations refer to the interfaces that monitors source ports. The Cisco Nexus 5000 Series switch
supports Ethernet and Fibre Channel interfaces as SPAN destinations.
Source SPAN
Ethernet
Fibre Channel
Fibre Channel
Virtual Fibre Channel
Virtual Fibre Channel

Characteristics of Destination Ports

Each local SPAN session must have a destination port (also called a monitoring port) that receives a copy
of traffic from the source ports, VLANs, or VSANs. A destination port has these characteristics:

Configuring SPAN

You can configure a SPAN session to duplicate packets from source ports to the specified destination
ports on the switch. This section includes the following topics:
Cisco Nexus 5000 Series Switch CLI Software Configuration Guide
49-2
Each source port can be configured with a direction (ingress, egress, or both) to monitor. For VLAN,
VSAN, port channel, and SAN port channel sources, the monitored direction can only be ingress
and applies to all physical ports in the group. The rx/tx option is not available for VLAN or VSAN
SPAN sessions.
Source ports can be in the same or different VLANs or VSANs.
For VLAN or VSAN SPAN sources, all active ports in the source VLAN or VSAN are included as
source ports.
The switch supports a maximum of two egress SPAN source ports.
Can be any physical port, Ethernet, Ethernet (FCoE), or Fibre Channel, and virtual Fibre Channel
ports cannot be destination ports.
Cannot be a source port.
Cannot be a port channel or SAN port channel group.
Does not participate in spanning tree while the SPAN session is active.
Is excluded from the source list and is not monitored if it belongs to a source VLAN of any SPAN
session.
Receives copies of sent and received traffic for all monitored source ports. If a destination port is
oversubscribed, it can become congested. This congestion can affect traffic forwarding on one or
more of the source ports.
Creating and Deleting a SPAN Session, page 49-3
Chapter 49
Dest SPAN
Ethernet
Fibre Channel
Ethernet (FCoE)
Fibre Channel
Ethernet (FCoE)
Configuring SPAN
OL-16597-01

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