Auto-Negotiation; Mac Address Table - Planet FNSW-1601 User Manual

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4.4 Auto-Negotiation

The 100Base-TX ports on the Fast Ethernet Switch have built-in "Auto-Negotiation".
This technology automatically sets the best possible bandwidth when a connection is
established with an-other network device (usually at Power On or Reset). This is done by
detect the mode and speed at the second device is capable of. The 100Base-TX devices
can connect with the 100Base-TX port in either Half- or Full-Duplex mode.
If attached device is:
100Mbps, no auto-negotiation
100Mbps, with auto-negotiation
10Mbps, no auto-negotiation
10Mbps, with auto-negotiation
Table D: Speed & Duplex mode detected by the switch

4.5 MAC Address Table

This 6-byte ID is called the MAC (Media Access Control) Ad-dress. Every Ethernet data
packet includes both source and destination addresses.
These Fast Ethernet Switch models can automatically learn and store up to 8K MAC
addresses. The MAC address table is volatile: it disappears when the switch is powered
off or reset.
Note: When the network needs reconfiguration, we recommend turning off
the power first. After all nodes have been moved, power on the switch
to rebuild the internal MAC address table.
10
100Base-TX port will set to:
100Mbps(100Base-TX, Half-Duplex)
200Mbps (100Base-TX, Full-Duplex)
10Mbps(10Base-T, Half-Duplex)
20Mbps(10Base-T, Full-Duplex)

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