Troubleshooting

Unusual Network Activity

Unusual Network Activity

Network activity that fails to meet accepted norms may indicate a hardware problem with one or more of the network components, possibly including the switch. Such problems can also be caused by a network loop or simply too much traffic for the network as it is currently designed and implemented. Unusual network activity is usually indicated by the LEDs on the front of the switch or measured with the switch console interface or with a network management tool such as ProCurve Manager. Refer to the Installation Guide you received with the switch for information on using LEDs to identify unusual network activity.

A topology loop can also cause excessive network activity. The Event Log “FFI” messages can be indicative of this type of problem.

General ProblemsThe network runs slow; processes fail; users cannot access servers or

other devices. Broadcast storms may be occurring in the network. These may be due to redundant links between nodes.

If you are configuring a port trunk, finish configuring the ports in the trunk before connecting the related cables. Otherwise you may inad­ vertently create a number of redundant links (i.e. topology loops) that will cause broadcast storms.

Turn on Spanning Tree Protocol to block redundant links (i.e. topology loops)

Check for FFI messages in the Event Log.

Duplicate IP Addresses. This is indicated by this Event Log message:

ip: Invalid ARP source: IP address on IP address

where: both instances of IP address are the same address, indicating the switch’s IP address has been duplicated somewhere on the network.

Duplicate IP Addresses in a DHCP Network. If you use a DHCP server to assign IP addresses in your network and you find a device with a valid IP address that does not appear to communicate properly with the server or other devices, a duplicate IP address may have been issued by the server. This can occur if a client has not released a DHCP-assigned IP address after the intended expiration time and the server “leases” the address to another device.

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