Appendix 4 Troubleshooting
Diagnosing Problems
Switch LEDs
You must have physical access to the switch to do this. Look at the port LEDs for troubleshooting information about the switch. See the “LEDs” section on page
Switch Connections
Bad or Damaged Cable
Always examine the cable for marginal damage or failure. A cable might be just good enough to connect at the physical layer, but it could corrupt packets as a result of subtle damage to the wiring or connectors. You can identify this situation because the port has many packet errors or the port constantly flaps (loses and regains link).
•Examine or exchange the copper or
•Look for broken or missing pins on cable connectors.
•Rule out any bad patch panel connections or media convertors between the source and the destination. If possible, bypass the patch panel, or eliminate faulty media convertors
•Try the cable in another port or interface, if possible, to see if the problem follows the cable.
Ethernet and Fiber Cables
Make sure that you have the correct cable type for the connection:
•For Ethernet, use Category 3 copper cable for 10 Mb/s UTP connections. Use either Category 5, Category 5e, or Category 6 UTP for 10/100 or 10/100/1000 Mb/s connections.
•For
•For copper connections, determine if a crossover cable was used when a
Link Status
Verify that both sides have link. A single broken wire or one shutdown port can cause one side to show link, but the other side does not have link.
A port LED does not guarantee that the cable is fully functional. The cable might have encountered physical stress that causes it to function at a marginal level. If the port LED does not turn on:
•Connect the cable from the switch to a known good device.
•Make sure that both ends of the cable are connected to the correct ports.
•Verify that both devices have power.
Cisco ME 3400E Ethernet Access Switch Hardware Installation Guide
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