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ProCurve Series 6120 Switches
Advanced Traffic Management Guide
August 2009
Contents
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Product Documentation
1 Getting Started
2 Static Virtual LANs (VLANs)
Terminology
General Steps for Using VLANs
802.1Q VLAN Tagging
Special VLAN Types
3 GVRP
4 Multiple Instance Spanning-TreeOperation
5Quality of Service (QoS): Managing Bandwidth More Effectively
QoS Queue Configuration
N o t e
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copy tftp
ProCurve
hostname
Displayed Text
Figure 1-1.Example of a Figure Showing a Simulated Screen
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Figure 1-2.Online Help for Menu Interface
Figure 1-5.Button for Onboard Administrator Interface Online Help
setup
8.Run Setup
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VLAN Features
The Default VLAN:
The Secure Management VLAN:
Voice VLANs:
Static VLAN:
Dynamic VLAN
Tagged Packet:
Tagged VLAN:
Untagged VLAN
Table 2-1.Comparative Operation of Port-Basedand Protocol-BasedVLANs
Table 2-2.VLAN Environments
The Default VLAN
Figure 2-1.Example of a Switch in the Default VLAN Configuration
Figure 2-2.Example of Multiple VLANs on the Switch
Protocol VLAN Environment
Figure 2-3.Example of Overlapping VLANs Using the Same Server
Figure 2-4.Example of Connecting Multiple VLANs Through the Same Link
Introducing Tagged VLAN Technology into Networks Running Legacy
(Untagged) VLANs
Figure 2-5.Example of Tagged and Untagged VLAN Technology in the Same Network
Figure 2-6.Comparing Per-PortVLAN Options With and Without GVRP
Table 2-3. Per-PortVLAN Configuration Options
- or
Forbid
DHCP/Bootp:
Per-VLAN
Features:
Deleting Static VLANs:
Adding or Deleting VLANs:
write memory
Inbound Tagged Packets:
Figure 2-7.Untagged VLAN Operation
Figure 2-8.Tagged VLAN Operation
Table 2-4.Example of Forwarding Database Content
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The Problem
The Solution
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2.Switch Configuration
8.VLAN Menu …
1.VLAN Support
Figure 2-12.The Default VLAN Support Screen
[E]
Maximum VLANs to support
Figure 2-13.VLAN Menu Screen Indicating the Need To Reboot the Switch
8.VLAN Menu …
2.VLAN Names
Figure 2-14.The Default VLAN Names Screen
Add
802.1Q VLAN ID :
Name :
Name
Figure 2-15.Example of VLAN Names Screen with a New VLAN Added
2. Switch Configuration
8. VLAN Menu …
3. VLAN Port Assignment
Edit
Untagged, or Forbid)
Untagged VLANs
Figure 2-17.Example of Port-BasedVLAN Assignments for Specific Ports
VLAN Commands
Maximum VLANs to support:
Primary VLAN:
Management VLAN:
802.1Q VLAN ID:
Status:
Port-Based
Protocol:
Dynamic:
Voice:
Port name:
VLAN ID:
Mode:
Figure 2-19.Example of “Show VLAN Ports” Cumulative Listing
Figure 2-20.Example of “Show VLAN Ports” Detail Listing
Port Information:
DEFAULT:
Unknown VLAN:
Figure 2-21.Example of “Show VLAN” for a Specific Static VLAN
Figure 2-22.Example of “Show VLAN” for a Specific Dynamic VLAN
Note:
Figure 2-23.Example of Command Sequence for Changing the Number of VLANs
Changing the Primary VLAN
show vlans
vlan
[no]
Figure 2-25.Example of Creating a New, Port-Based,Static VLAN
show vlan
VLAN already exists
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Figure 2-26.Example of Tagged and Untagged VLAN Port Assignments
Figure 2-27.Example of VLAN ID Numbers Assigned in the VLAN Names Screen
Figure 2-28.Example of Networked 802.1Q-CompliantDevices with Multiple
VLANs on Some Ports
Switch
Switch Y
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Figure 2-29.Example of Potential Security Breaches
Figure 2-30.Example of Management VLAN Control in a LAN
Table 2-5.VLAN Membership in Figure
reboot
My_VLAN
Figure 2-31.Illustration of Configuration Example
Figure 2-32.Example of DHCP Server on Management VLAN
Figure 2-33.Example of DHCP Server on Different VLAN from the Management
VLAN
Figure 2-34.Example of no Management VLANs Configured
Figure 2-35.Example of Client on Different Management VLAN from DHCP Server
Figure 2-36.Example of DHCP Server and Client on the Management VLAN
write-memory
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Voice VLAN(s):
Tagged/Untagged VLAN Membership:
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no vlan
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N o t e :
max vlans
Figure 3-1.Example of Forwarding Advertisements and Dynamic Joining
Switch “D”
GVRP On
Figure 3-2.Example of GVRP Operation
IP Addressing
Table 3-1.Options for Handling “Unknown VLAN” Advertisements:
show gvrp
Figure 3-3.Example of GVRP Unknown VLAN Settings
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Table 3-2.Controlling VLAN Behavior on Ports with Static VLANs
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2.Switch Configuration …
Figure 3-4.The VLAN Support Screen (Default Configuration)
Yes
Unknown VLAN
Figure 3-5.Example Showing Default Settings for Handling Advertisements
ave
GVRP Commands Used in This Section
Figure 3-6.Example of “Show GVRP” Listing with GVRP Disabled
Figure 3-7.Example of Show GVRP Listing with GVRP Enabled
Enabling and Disabling GVRP on the Switch. This command enables
Syntax: gvrp
Figure 3-8.Displaying the Static and Dynamic VLANs Active on the Switch
Figure 3-9.Example of Listing Showing Dynamic VLANs
Configuration
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Figure 4-1.Example of a Multiple Spanning-TreeApplication
C a u t i o n
Figure 4-2.Example of MSTP Network with Legacy STP and RSTP Devices Connected
MST Region:
Internal Spanning Tree (IST):
Internal
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Figure 4-3.Active Topologies Built by Three Independent MST Instances
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Connectivity within the Same MST Instance
BPDU —
BPDU Filtering —
BPDU Protection —
Bridge:
Common Spanning Tree (CST):
MSTP Bridge:
RSTP —
Spanning-tree
STP —
SNMP —
instance vlan
legacy-path
cost
Note on Path Cost
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Region Revision Number: spanning-tree config-revision
max-hops
–Force-Versionoperation: spanning-tree force-version
–Forward Delay: spanning-tree forward-delay
maximum-age
3.Configure MST instances
spanning-treeinstance < n > vlan < vid
no spanning- tree instance
5.Configure MST instance port parameters
instance
Page
pending
stp-compatible:
rstp-operation:
mstp-operation:
force-version
(Default: MSTP-operation.)
802.1t
Global
> hello- time < 1..10
apply:
config-name:
config-revision:
instance:
reset:
Disabled
admin-edge-port
admin
edge-port
auto-edge-port
auto
Yes - enabled
global
hello- time
true
default)
false
auto:
show running
root- guard
tcn-guard
Command Syntax and Example
always
Figure 4-5.Example of BPDU Filter in Show Spanning Tree Configuration Command
Figure 4-6.Example of BPDU Filters in the Show Configuration Command
Figure 4-7.Example of BPDU Protection Enabled at the Network Edge
Example
interface
enable
period using the spanning-tree bpdu-protection-timeout command
bpdu-protection
Figure 4-9.Example of BPDU Filters in the Show Configuration Command
spanning-tree
instance vlan
Switch Priority
auto
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instance ist
> instance ist
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apply
config-name
config-revision:
reset
config-revision
pending apply
■Region name (spanning-tree config-name)
■Region revision number (spanning-tree config-revision)
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Figure 4-11.Example of Mapping VLANs on Other ProCurve Switches
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show config files
Figure 4-12.An Example of the show config files Command Output
Figure 4-13.A Config File for the Current Software Version is Created
show flash
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a20-a42,trk1
Figure 4-15.Example of Common Spanning Tree Status
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show spanning-tree a20-a24,trk1config instance
Figure 4-19.Example of the Configuration Listing for a Specific Instance
Figure 4-20.Example of a Region-LevelConfiguration Display
Figure 4-21.Example of Displaying a Pending Configuration
root-history
cst
ist
mst
root-guard
root- history
priority
instance priority
Figure 4-22.Example of show spanning-tree root-historycst Command Output
Figure 4-23.Example of show spanning-tree root-historyist Command Output
Figure 4-24.Example of show spanning-tree root-historymsti Command Output
debug- counters
Figure 4-25.Example of show spanning-tree debug-countersCommand Output
debug- counters instance
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ports
a2-a8
a20
trk1
trk4-trk5
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output of show spanning-tree debug-counters commands
Table 4-1.MSTP Debug Command Output: Field Descriptions
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Table 4-2.Troubleshooting MSTP Operation
On ports connected to unmanaged devices
Figure 4-29.Examples of Loop Protection Enabled in Preference to STP
loop-protect
N o t e s
interval
trap
to receive-action send-disable
Figure 4-30.Example of Show Loop-ProtectDisplay
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Set Priority
Honor Priority
Change Priority
Honor New Priority
Set Policy
802.1p prioritization:
Type-of-Service
(ToS):
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Table 5-1.Port Queue Exit Priorities
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Table 5-2.QoS Priority Settings and Operation
Table 5-3.Mapping Switch QoS Priority Settings to Device Queues
M u l t i p l e
C r i t e r i a
Table 5-4.Classifier Search Order and Precedence
Table 5-5.Summary of QoS Capabilities
Table 5-6.Applying QoS Options to Traffic Types Defined by QoS Classifiers
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QoS Classifier Precedence:
ToS
IP-Precedence
Mode:
ToS Differentiated Services (Diffserv) Mode:
Figure 5-3.Example of Enabling ToS IP-PrecedencePrioritization
Figure 5-4.Interior Switch “B” Honors the Policy Established in Edge Switch “A”
4.Enable diff-services
diff-services
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incoming-DSCP
outgoing- DSCP
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A Differentiated Services Codepoint (DSCP):
qos dscp map
Figure 5-10.The ToS Codepoint and Precedence Bits
Table 5-7.How the Switch Uses the ToS Configuration
ToS Option:
Table 5-8.ToS IP-PrecedenceBit Mappings to 802.1p Priorities
qos
interface
Figure 5-11.Configuring and Displaying Source-PortQoS Priorities
Figure 5-12.Returning a QoS-PrioritizedVLAN to “No-override”Status
Steps for Creating a Policy Based on Source-PortClassifiers
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Figure 5-13.Display the Current Configuration in the DSCP Policy Table
Figure 5-14.Assign Priorities to the Selected DSCPs
Figure 5-15.The Completed Source-Port DSCP-PriorityConfiguration
Radius Override Field
ascii-string
policy name, if
Table
The Default DSCP Policy Table
> priority < 0 - 7 >)
Effect of
show qos
classifier
Table 5-10.Error Messages Generated by DSCP Policy Changes
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port-priority
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Table 5-11.Details of Packet Criteria and Restrictions for QoS Support
All Switches:
For Devices that Do Not Support 802.1Q
Maximum QoS Configuration Entries:
Table 5-12.Maximum QoS Entries
Not Supported:
Monitoring Shared Resources:
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Numerics