Tx Pause

Show the counting number of the transmitted pause packet.

Tx 64 Bytes

Display the number of 64-byte frames in good and bad

 

packets transmitted.

Tx 65-127 Bytes

Display the number of 65 ~ 127-byte frames in good and

 

bad packets transmitted.

Tx 128-255 Bytes

Display the number of 128 ~ 255-byte frames in good and

 

bad packets transmitted.

Tx 256-511 Bytes

Display the number of 256 ~ 511-byte frames in good and

 

bad packets transmitted.

Tx 512-1023 Bytes

Display the number of 512 ~ 1023-byte frames in good and

 

bad packets transmitted.

Tx 1024- 1526 Bytes

Display the number of 1024 ~ 1522-byt frames in good and

 

bad packets transmitted.

Tx 1527 Bytes:

Display the number of 1527-byte frames in good and bad

 

packets transmitted.

Tx Low

Display the low queue counter of the packet transmitted.

Tx Normal

Display the normal queue counter of the packet

 

transmitted.

Tx Medium

Display the medium queue counter of the packet received.

Tx High

Display the high queue counter of the packet received.

Tx Drops

Display the number of frames dropped due to excessive

 

collision, late collision, or frame aging.

Tx lat/Exc.Coll.

Display the number of Frames late collision or excessive

 

collision Error, which switch transmitted

Auto-refresh

Check it to enable auto-refresh function.

Refresh

Click it to reload the page.

Clear

Click it to clear the counters for all ports.

4.14.6 MAC Address Table

The MAC Address Table contains up to 8192 entries, and is sorted first by VLAN ID, then by MAC address.

Each page shows up to 999 entries from the MAC table, default being 20, selected through the "entries per page" input field. When first visited, the web page will show the first 20 entries from the beginning of the MAC Table. The first displayed will be the one with the lowest VLAN ID and the lowest MAC address found in the MAC Table.

The Start from MAC address and VLAN input fields allow the user to select the starting point in the MAC Table. Clicking the Refresh button will update the displayed table starting from that or the closest next MAC Table match. In addition, the two input fields will assume the value of the first displayed entry, allowing for continuous refresh with the same start address.

The button >> will use the last entry of the currently displayed VLAN/MAC address pairs as a basis for the next lookup. When the end is reached the text "no more entries" is shown in the displayed table, use the l<< button to start over.

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Draytek 2750 manual Bad packets transmitted