Cisco Systems NME-16ES-1G manual Ease-of-Use and Ease-of-Deployment Features, Performance Features

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Cisco EtherSwitch Service Modules Feature Guide

Information About the Cisco EtherSwitch Service Modules

Ease-of-Use and Ease-of-Deployment Features

Express Setup for quickly configuring a Cisco EtherSwitch service module for the first time with basic IP information, contact information, Cisco EtherSwitch service module and Telnet passwords, and Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) information through a browser-based program.

Graphical user interfaces (GUIs) for easier Cisco EtherSwitch service module configuration and monitoring. For more information about these GUIs, see the “Management Options” section on page 6.

User-defined and Cisco-default SmartPorts macros for creating custom Cisco EtherSwitch service module configurations for simplified deployment across the network.

Cisco StackWise technology for these uses:

Connecting up to nine Cisco EtherSwitch service modules through Cisco StackWise ports and operating as a single switch in the network.

Using a single IP address and configuration file to manage the entire switch stack.

Automatic Cisco IOS software version-check of new stack members with the option to automatically load images from the stack master or from a TFTP server.

Adding, removing, and replacing Cisco EtherSwitch service modules in the stack without disrupting the operation of the stack.

Provisioning a new member for a switch stack with the offline configuration feature. You can configure the interface configuration for a specific stack member number in advance. The switch stack retains this information across stack reloads whether or not the provisioned Cisco EtherSwitch service module is part of the stack.

Displaying stack-ring activity statistics (the number of frames sent by each stack member to the ring).

Performance Features

Autosensing of port speed and autonegotiation of duplex mode on all Cisco EtherSwitch service module ports for optimizing bandwidth

Automatic-medium-dependent interface crossover (Auto-MDIX) capability on 10/100-Mbps interfaces that enables the interface to automatically detect the required cable connection type (straight-through or crossover) and to configure the connection appropriately

Up to 32 Gbps of forwarding rates in a switch stack

EtherChannel for enhanced fault tolerance and for providing up to 800 Mbps (Fast EtherChannel) of full-duplex bandwidth between Cisco EtherSwitch service modules, routers, and servers

Port Aggregation Protocol (PAgP) and Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) for automatic creation of EtherChannel links

Forwarding of Layer 2 and Layer 3 packets at gigabit-per-second line rate across the Cisco EtherSwitch service modules in the stack

Per-port storm control for preventing broadcast, multicast, and unicast storms

Port blocking on forwarding unknown Layer 2 unknown unicast, multicast, and bridged broadcast traffic

Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)SEC

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Contents Release Modification GuideContents Hardware Overview Network Modules Hardware Installation GuideSoftware Features and Benefits Performance Features Ease-of-Use and Ease-of-Deployment FeaturesManagement Options Availability Features Manageability FeaturesVlan Features Security Features QoS and CoS Features Monitoring Features Power-over-Ethernet FeaturesCisco StackWise Concepts Overview of Switch StacksSwitch Stack Membership Stack Master Election and Re-Election Stack Member Numbers Switch Stack Bridge ID and Router MAC AddressStack Member Priority Values Stack Protocol Version Compatibility Switch Stack Software Compatibility RecommendationsSwitch Stack Configuration Files Switch Stack Management Connectivity Management Connectivity to Specific Stack Members Accessing the CLI of a Specific Stack MemberClustering Concepts Cluster Compatibility Command Device CharacteristicsStandby Command Device Characteristics Discovery of Candidates and Members Through CDP Hops Candidate and Member CharacteristicsAutomatic Discovery of Candidates and Members Vlan Discovery of Candidates and Members Through Different VLANs Discovery of Candidates and Members Through Routed Ports SwitchNew out-of-box Discovery of Newly Installed Switches in ClustersHsrp and Standby Cluster Command Switches Other Considerations for Cluster Standby Groups Virtual IP Addresses in ClustersAutomatic Recovery of Cluster Configuration Hostnames in Clusters IP Addresses in ClustersSwitch Clusters and Switch Stacks Passwords in ClustersSwitch Stack Switch Cluster Snmp Community Strings in ClustersSwitch Stack Switch Cluster TACACS+ and Radius in Clusters Availability of Switch-Specific Features in Switch ClustersCisco IOS Release 12.225SEC Using Interface Configuration Mode Boot flash image-name Command or Action PurposeExample Dir flashShow running configuration EnableConfigure terminal Service-module interface slot/port sessionOutput of the show service-module status command Show power inlineShow ip interface brief Control+shift+6Sample Output for the boot flash Command on the Router Sample Output for the dir flash Command on the RouterRouter boot flashc2800-adventerprisek9-mz ExamplesRouter# configure terminal Router# show running config interface gigabitethernet2/0Router# service-module gigabitethernet2/0 session Switch dir flashSwitch# ctrl+shift+6 Switch# show ip interface briefSwitch# show power inline Sample Output for Pressing Ctrl+Shift+6 Followed byDhcp Feature Default SettingSTP Prerequisites Clustering Concepts section on Return Sample Output for Assigning the IP Address and Subnet Mask Sample Output for Entering an Interface NameCommand or Action Purpose Sample Output for Saving the Configuration to NvramRouter# service-module gigabitethernet1/0 reload Router# service-module gigabitethernet1/0 shutdownRouter# service-module gigabitethernet1/0 reset Cisco IOS Release 12.225SEC Restrictions Default Switch Stack ConfigurationAssigning a Stack Member Number Sample Output for the reload slot Command Sample Output for the switch renumber CommandShow switch Switchconfig# switch 6 renumberSample Output for the show switch Command Setting the Stack Member Priority ValueSample Output for the switch priority Command Verifying Information About the Switch StackSwitchconfig# switch 2 priority Switch show switchSwitch# show platform stack-manager all Show switch stack-ports Switchconfig# show switch neighborsShow version Using the CLI to Manage Switch ClustersRcommand Sample Output for the show cluster members Command Sample Output for the rcommand and show version CommandsChoose View Refresh Choose Cluster Add to Cluster or Cluster member PasswordDetailed Steps from the CLI Creating a Cluster Standby GroupRouting-redundancy Cluster standby-group HSRP-group-nameNo switchport Sample Output for the ping tftpserver Command Sample Output for the copy tftp flash Command Sample Output for the show flash CommandSwitch# show flash Switch# copy tftp flashService-module interface slot/port password-reset Flashinit Recovering from a Corrupted Software Image Using XmodemPassword-reset Service-module interface slot/portFlashinit Control+6Router# copy flash xmodem TroubleshootingSample Output for the copy flash xmodem Command Router# copy tftp xmodem Sample Output for the copy tftp xmodem CommandRouter# service-module gigabitethernet2/0 password-reset Router# service-module gigabitethernet1/0 sessionRecovering from a Lost or Forgotten Password Optional loadhelper filesystem/file-url Enable secret password Boot -x -v deviceimagenameRename Copy flashReload Copy running-configuration startup-configurationOptional set Boot Service-module password-reset commandSet Sample Output for the set CommandExample Scenario Action Result Current-stack-member-number Renumber new-stack-member-number Network Configuration Examples Network Demands Suggested Design Methods Cost-Effective Wiring Closet Redundant Gigabit Backbone Cisco SoftPhone Software 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