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Extreme Networks
200 Series manual
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338 pages, 6.11 Mb
Extreme Networks, Inc.
3585 Monroe Street
Santa Clara, California 95051
(888) 257-3000
http://www
.e
xtremenetworks.com
Summit 200 Ser
ies Switch
Installation and User Guide
Software Version 7.1e0
December
, 2003
P
art Number :
100149-00 Re
v 02
Contents
Main
Page
Contents
Preface
Chapter 1 Summit 200 Series Switch Overview
Chapter 2 Switch Installation
Chapter 3 ExtremeWare Overview
Chapter 4 Accessing the Switch
Chapter 5 Managing the Switch
Chapter 6 Configuring Ports on a Switch
Chapter 7 Virtual LANs (VLANs)
Chapter 8 Forwarding Database (FDB)
Chapter 9 Access Policies
Chapter 10 Network Address Translation (NAT)
Chapter 11 Ethernet Automatic Protection Switching
Chapter 12 Quality of Service (QoS)
Chapter 13 Status Monitoring and Statistics
Chapter 14 Spanning Tree Protocol (STP)
Chapter 15 IP Unicast Routing
Chapter 16 Interior Gateway Routing Protocols
Chapter 17 IP Multicast Routing and IGMP Snooping
Chapter 18 Configuring Stacked Switches
Chapter 19 Using ExtremeWare Vista on the Summit 200
Appendix A Safety Information
Appendix B Technical Specifications
Appendix C Supported Standards
Appendix D Software Upgrade and Boot Options
Appendix E Troubleshooting
Index Index of Commands
Page
Preface
Introduction
Conventions
Related Publications
1
Summit 200 Series Switches
Summary of Features
Summit 200-24 Switch Physical Features
Summit 200-24 Switch Front View
Console Port
Port Connections
Summit 200-24 Switch Uplink Redundancy
Full-Duplex
Summit 200-24 Switch LEDs
Table 3 describes the light emitting diode (LED) behavior on the Summit 200-24 switch.
Table 3: Summit 200-24 switch LED behavior
Summit 200-24 Switch Rear View
Summit 200-48 Switch Physical Features
Summit 200-48 Switch Front View
Console Port
Port Connections
Gigabit Ethernet Port Failover Speed
Summit 200-48 Switch Uplink Redundancy
Full-Duplex
Summit 200-48 Switch LEDs
Table 4 describes the LED behavior on the Summit 200-48 switch.
Summit 200-48 Switch Rear View
Figure 4 shows the rear view of the Summit 200-48 switch. Figure 4: Summit 200-48 switch rear view
Power Socket
Table 4: Summit 200-48 switch LED behavior
Serial Number
Mini-GBIC Type and Hardware/Software Support
Mini-GBIC Type and Specifications
SX Mini-GBIC Specifications
LX Mini-GBIC Specifications
ZX Mini-GBIC Specifications
Long Range GBIC System Budgets
Page
2
Determining the Switch Location
Following Safety Information
Installing the Switch
Rack Mounting
Free-Standing
Desktop Mounting of Multiple Switches
Installing or Replacing a Mini-Gigabit Interface Connector (Mini-GBIC)
Safety Information
Preparing to Install or Replace a Mini-GBIC
Removing and Inserting a Mini-GBIC
Removing a Mini-GBIC
Inserting a Mini-GBIC
Creating a Stack
Connecting Equipment to the Console Port
Table 10: Console Connector Pinouts
Powering On the Switch
Checking the Installation
Logging In for the First Time
Page
Page
3
Summary of Features
Virtual LANs (VLANs)
Spanning T ree Pr otocol
Quality of Service
Unicast Routing
Load Sharing
ESRP-Aware Switches
Software Licensing
Feature Licensing
Edge Functionality
Advanced Edge Functionality
Enabling the Advanced Edge Functionality
Security Licensing for Features Under License Control
SSH2 Encryption
Software Factory Defaults
Page
Page
4
Understanding the Command Syntax
Syntax Helper
Command Completion with Syntax Helper
Abbreviated Syntax
Command Shortcuts
Summit 200 Series Switch Numerical Ranges
Line-Editing Keys
Command History
Common Commands
Table 14: Common Commands
Table 13: Line-Editing Keys (continued)
Table 14: Common Commands (continued)
Configuring Management Access
User Account
A user-level account has viewing access to all manageable parameters, with the exception of:
Table 14: Common Commands (continued)
Administrator Account
Prompt Text
Default Accounts
Changing the Default Password
Creating a Management Account
Viewing Accounts
Deleting an Account
Domain Name Service Client Services
Checking Basic Connectivity
Ping
Traceroute
Page
Page
5
Using the Console Interface
Using Telnet
Connecting to Another Host Using Telnet
Configuring Switch IP Parameters
Using a BOOTP Server
Manually Configuring the IP Settings
Disconnecting a Telnet Session
Controlling Telnet Access
Using Secure Shell 2 (SSH2)
Enabling SSH2
Using SNMP
Accessing Switch Agents
Supported MIBs
Configuring SNMP Settings
Page
Displaying SNMP Settings
Authenticating Users
RADIUS Client
Per-Command Authentication Using RADIUS
Configuring RADIUS Client
RADIUS RFC 2138 Attributes
Table 19: RADIUS Commands (continued)
RADIUS Server Configuration Example (Merit)
RADIUS Per-Command Configuration Example
Page
Configuring TACACS+
Table 20: TACACS+ Commands
Network Login
Web-Based and 802.1x Authentication
Co-existence of Web-Based and 802.1x Authentication
Comparison of Web-Based and 802.1x Authentication
Authentication Methods
Campus and ISP Modes
User Accounts
Interoperability Requirements
Supplicant Side
Authentication Server Side
Multiple Supplicant Support
Exclusions and Limitations
Configuring Network Login
Web-Based Authentication User Login Using Campus Mode
Page
DHCP Server on the Switch
Displaying DHCP Information
Displaying Network Login Settings
Disabling Network Login
Additional Configuration Details
Network Login Configuration Commands
Displaying Network Login Settings
Disabling Network Login
Using EAPOL Flooding
Using the Simple Network Time Protocol
Configuring and Using SNTP
Page
Table 25: Greenwich Mean Time Offsets (continued)
SNTP Configuration Commands
Table 26 describes SNTP configuration commands.
SNTP Example
Table 26: SNTP Configuration Commands
Table 25: Greenwich Mean Time Offsets (continued)
Page
6
Enabling and Disabling Switch Ports
Configuring Switch Port Speed and Duplex Setting
Turning Off Autonegotiation for a Gigabit Ethernet Port
Turning Off Autopolarity Detection for an Ethernet Port
Switch Port Commands
Table 27: Switch Port Commands (continued)
Load Sharing on the Switch
Table 27: Switch Port Commands (continued)
Load-Sharing Algorithms
Configured IP Address-Based Load Sharing
Configuring Switch Load Sharing
Load-Sharing Example
Load-Sharing on a Summit 200 Series Switch
Verifying the Load-Sharing Configuration
Switch Port-Mirroring
Por t-Mir ro rin g Com mands
Port-Mirroring Example
Setting Up a Redundant Gigabit Uplink Port
Extreme Discovery Protocol
EDP Commands
7
Overview of Virtual LANs
Benefits
Types of VLANs
Port-Based VLANs
Spanning Switches with Port-Based VLANs
Sales
Accounting Engineering
Ta g ge d V LA Ns
Uses of Tagged VLANs
Assigning a VLAN Tag
*Tagged Ports
MMSS
Sales
Marketing
Mixing Port-Based and Tagged VLANs
VLAN Names
Default VLAN
Renaming a VLAN
Configuring VLANs on the Switch
VLAN Configuration Commands
VLAN Configuration Examples
Displaying VLAN Settings
MAC-Based VLANs
MAC-Based VLAN Guidelines
MAC-Based VLAN Limitations
MAC-Based VLAN Example
Timed Configuration Download for MAC-Based VLANs
Page
Page
8
Overview of the FDB
FDB Contents
FDB Entry Types
How FDB Entries Get Added
Associating a QoS Profile with an FDB Entry
Configuring FDB Entries
To configure entries in the FDB, use the commands listed in Table 31.
FDB Configuration Examples
The following example adds a permanent entry to the FDB:
Table 31: FDB Configuration Commands
Displaying FDB Entries
On a Non-stacked Switch
On a Stacked Set of Switches
Page
Page
9
Overview of Access Policies
Access Control Lists
Rate Limits
Routing Access Policies
Using Access Control Lists
Access Masks
Access Lists
Rate Limits
How Access Control Lists Work
Access Mask Precedence Numbers
Specifying a Default Rule
The permit-established Keyword
Adding Access Mask, Access List, and Rate Limit Entries
Maximum Entries
Deleting Access Mask, Access List, and Rate Limit Entries
Verifying Access Control List Configurations
Access Control List Commands
Table 32: Access Control List Configuration Commands
Page
Table 32: Access Control List Configuration Commands (continued)
Access Control List Examples
Using the Permit-Established Keyword
Page
Page
Example 2: Filter ICMP Packets
10.10.10.100 10.10.20.100
Example 3: Rate-limiting Packets
SYN SYN
Using Routing Access Policies
Creating an Access Profile
Configuring an Access Profile Mode
Adding an Access Profile Entry
Specifying Subnet Masks
Deleting an Access Profile Entry
Applying Access Profiles
Routing Access Policies for RIP
Examples
Routing Access Policies for OSPF
Making Changes to a Routing Access Policy
Removing a Routing Access Policy
Routing Access Policy Commands
Table 33: Routing Access Policy Configuration Commands (continued)
10
NAT switch
Internet
Inside Outside
Private Network
Internet IP Addressing
Configuring VLANs for NAT
NAT Modes
Static Mapping
Dynamic Mapping
Port-mapping
Auto-constraining
Configuring NAT
Configuring NAT Rules
Creating NAT Rules
Creating Static and Dynamic NAT Rules
Static NAT Rule Example
Dynamic NAT Rule Example
Creating Portmap NAT Rules
Creating Auto-Constrain NAT Rules
Auto-Constrain Example
Advanced Rule Matching
Destination Specific NAT
L4-Port Specific NAT
Displaying NAT Settings
Page
11
Overview of the EAPS Protocol
Direction of health-check message Master node
Secondary port is logically blocked
S 4 S 5 S 6
S S 2 S 1
SP
Optimizing Interoperability
Fault Detection and Recovery
PS
S 4 S 5 S
S 3 S 2 S 1
Restoration Operations
Summit 200 Series Switches in Multi-ring Topologies
LHS ring RHS ring
Commands for Configuring and Monitoring EAPS
Creating and Deleting an EAPS Domain
Defining the EAPS Mode of the Switch
Configuring EAPS Polling Timers
Configuring the Primary and Secondary Ports
Configuring the EAPS Control VLAN
Configuring the EAPS Protected VLANs
Enabling and Disabling an EAPS Domain
Enabling and Disabling EAPS
Unconfiguring an EAPS Ring Port
Displaying EAPS Status Information
Page
Table 37: show eaps Display Fields
Table 37: show eaps Display Fields (continued)
Page
12
Overview of Policy-Based Quality of Service
Applications and Types of QoS
Video Applications
Critical Database Applications
Web Browsing Applications
File Server Applications
Configuring QoS for a Port or VLAN
Traffic Groupings
Access List Based Traffic Groupings
MAC-Based Traffic Groupings
Permanent MAC addresses
Dynamic MAC Addresses
Blackhole MAC Address
Explicit Class of Service (802.1p and DiffServ) Traffic Groupings
Configuring 802.1p Priority
Observing 802.1p Information
802.1p Commands
Configuring 802.1p Priority
Replacing 802.1p Priority Information
Configuring DiffServ
Observing DiffServ Information
Changing DiffServ Code point assignments in the QoS Profile
Replacing DiffServ Code Points
DiffServ Examples
Physical and Logical Groupings
Source port
VLAN
Verifying Physical and Logical Groupings
Verifying Configuration and Performance
QoS Monitor
Real-Time Performance Monitoring
Displaying QoS Profile Information
Modifying a QoS Configuration
Traffic Rate-Limiting
Dynamic Link Context System
DLCS Guidelines
DLCS Limitations
DLCS Commands
Page
13
Status Monitoring
Page
Port Statistics
Port Errors
Port Monitoring Display Keys
Setting the System Recovery Level
Logging
Local Logging
Real-Time Display
Remote Logging
Logging Configuration Changes
Logging Commands
RMON
About RMON
RMON Features of the Switch
Statistics
History
Alarms
Events
Configuring RMON
Event Actions
Page
14
Overview of the Spanning Tree Protocol
Spanning Tree Domains
Defaults
STPD BPDU Tunneling
STP Configurations
Page
Configuring STP on the Switch
Page
Table 52: STP Configuration Commands (continued)
STP Configuration Example
Displaying STP Settings
Disabling and Resetting STP
Page
15
Overview of IP Unicast Routing
Router Interfaces
Populating the Routing Table
Dynamic Routes
Static Routes
Multiple Routes
IP Route Sharing
Proxy ARP
ARP-Incapable Devices
Proxy ARP Between Subnets
Relative Route Priorities
Configuring IP Unicast Routing
Verifying the IP Unicast Routing Configuration
IP Commands
Table 56 describes the commands used to configure the IP route table.
Table 56: Route Table Configuration Commands
Table 55: Basic IP Commands (continued)
Table 57 describes the commands used to configure IP options and the ICMP protocol.
Table 57: ICMP Configuration Commands
Table 56: Route Table Configuration Commands (continued)
Table 57: ICMP Configuration Commands (continued)
Routing Configuration Example
Figure 34: Unicast routing configuration example
Displaying Router Settings
To display settings for various IP routing components, use the commands listed in Table 58.
Resetting and Disabling Router Settings
Table 58: Router Show Commands
Table 59: Router Reset and Disable Commands
Configuring DHCP/BOOTP Relay
Verifying the DHCP/BOOTP Relay Configuration
UDP-Forwarding
Configuring UDP-Forwarding
UDP-Forwarding Example
ICMP Packet Processing
UDP-Forwarding Commands
16
RIP Versus OSPF
Overview of RIP
Routing Table
Split Horizon
Pois on Revers e
Tr i g ge re d U pd a t es
Route Advertisement of VLANs
Overview of OSPF
Link-State Database
Database Overflow
Opaque LSAs
Areas
Backbone Area (Area 0.0.0.0)
Stub Areas
Not-So-Stubby-Areas (NSSA)
Normal Area
Virtual Links
ABR ABR
Virtual link
Area 2 Area 1 Area 0
Point-to-Point Support
Virtual link
ABR 1 ABR 2
Area 1 Area 0 Area 3
Area 2
Route Re-Distribution
Configuring Route Re-Distribution
Re-Distributing Routes into OSPF
Re-Distributing Routes into RIP
OSPF Timers and Authentication
Configuring RIP
Table 63 describes the commands used to configure RIP. Table 63: RIP Configuration Commands
Table 63: RIP Configuration Commands (continued)
RIP Configuration Example
Displaying RIP Settings
Resetting and Disabling RIP
Configuring OSPF
Table 66 describes the commands used to configure OSPF. Table 66: OSPF Configuration Commands
Page
Page
Page
Configuring OSPF Wait Interval
Displaying OSPF Settings
OSPF LSD Display
Resetting and Disabling OSPF Settings
Page
17
IGMP Snooping
IP Multicast Routing Overview
PIM Sparse Mode (PIM-SM) Overview
Configuring PIM-SM
Enabling and Disabling PIM-SM
PIM-SM Commands
Table 69 summaries the PIM-SM commands available on the Summit 200: Table 69: PIM-SM Commands
IGMP Overview
Configuring IGMP and IGMP Snooping
Displaying IGMP Snooping Configuration Information
Clearing, Disabling, and Resetting IGMP Functions
Table 71: IGMP Disable and Reset Commands
Table 70: IGMP and IGMP Snooping Commands (continued)
Page
18
Introducing Stacking
Configuring a Stack
Creating a Backup Configuration
Enabling the Master
Enabling a Stack Member
Stack Discovery
Configuring Ports and VLANS on Stacks
Page
Recovering a Stack
Changing a Stack Configuration
Stack Configuration Commands
Table 72 summarizes the commands used to configure a stack. Table 72: Stack Configuration Commands
Running Features on a Stack
Testing Images for a Stack
Using the Console for Managing the Stack
Setting the Command Prompt
19
on the Summit 200
ExtremeWare Vista Overview
Setting Up Your Browser
Accessing ExtremeWare Vista
Page
Navigating within ExtremeWare Vista
Browser Controls
Status Messages
Standalone Buttons
Configuring the Summit 200 using ExtremeWare Vista
IP Forwarding
License
OSPF
Configure Global OSPF Parameters
Create or Delete an OSPF Area
Configure an Area Range
Configure an OSPF Area
Configure an IP interface for OSPF
Page
Page
Configure OSPF Authentication
Ports
Page
RIP
Configure Global RIP Parameters
Configure RIP for an IP interface
Page
SNMP
System Group Configuration
Trap Information
Spanning Tree
Page
Page
Page
Switch
User Accounts
Virtual LAN
Creating and Deleting a VLAN
Renaming a VLAN
Configuring a VLAN
Reviewing ExtremeWare Vista Statistical Reports
Event Log
FDB
IP ARP
IP Configuration
Global IP Configuration Statistics
Router Interface Statistics
IP Route
IP Statistics
Global IP Statistics
Global ICMP Statistics
Router Interface IP Statistics
Ports
Port Collisions
Por t Errors
Port Utilization
RIP
Switch
Locating Support Information
Help
TFTP Download
Page
Page
Page
Page
A
Important Safety Information
Power
Power Co rd
Connections
Lithium Battery
Page
Page
B
Summit 200-24 Switch
Page
Page
Summit 200-48 Switch
Page
Page
C
ExtremeWare supports the following standards for the Summit 200 series switch.
Management and Security
Standards and Protocols
Page
D
Downloading a New Image
Rebooting the Switch
As an Non-stacked Switch
As a Stacked Set of Switches
Saving Configuration Changes
Returning to Factory Defaults
Using TFTP to Upload the Configuration
Using TFTP to Download the Configuration
Downloading a Complete Configuration
Downloading an Incremental Configuration
Scheduled Incremental Configuration Download
Remember to Save
Upgrading and Accessing BootROM
Upgrading BootROM
Accessing the BootROM menu
Boot Option Commands
Table 74: Boot Option Commands (continued)
E
LEDs
Using the Command-Line Interface
Port Configuration
VLANs
STP
Debug Tracing
TOP Command
Contacting Extreme Technical Support
Page
Index
Numerics
A
permit-established permit-established
B
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
permit-established
ping
R
S
Page
T
traceroute
U
V
W
Page
Index of Commands
C
Page
D
E
H
L
N
P
Q
T
U