11-6 CHAPTER 11: ADMINISTERING BRIDGE PORTS

Frame Processing and Bridge Port Statistics

All frames received on a physical (Ethernet or FDDI) interface and not explicitly directed to the Switch 2200 are delivered to the corresponding bridge port. A frame is then either forwarded to another bridge port or discarded. A frame might be discarded for the following reasons:

The destination station is on the same segment as the source station.

The receive bridge port is blocked.

There is some problem with the frame.

A user-defined packet filter indicated that the frame should not be forwarded.

Figure 11-1 shows the order in which the discard decisions are made.

Receive Bridge Port Statistics

rxFrames

sameSegDiscs

 

rxBlockedDiscs

 

rxSecurityDiscs

 

rxErrorDiscs

 

rxOtherDiscs

 

rxMcastFilters

 

rxAllFilters

 

rxForwardUcasts

=

rxFloodUcasts

rxForwardMcasts

 

from Physical Interface

Frames received on this bridge port

 

 

Frames discarded because source and

 

destination stations on same segment

 

Frames discarded because receive bridge port

 

blocked

processingof

bridging

Frames discarded because frame not valid for

 

Frames discarded because of user-defined

frames

 

packet filter

 

 

 

 

Frames forwarded by this bridge port

 

 

 

 

Figure 11-1 How Frame Processing Affects Receive Bridge Port Statistics

A frame forwarded to a bridge port is transmitted onto a physical interface unless it is discarded. A frame might be discarded for the following reasons:

The transmit bridge port is blocked.

The frame is too large for the corresponding physical interface.

A user-defined packet filter indicated that the frame should not be forwarded.

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Image 129
3Com 2200 manual Shows the order in which the discard decisions are made