Cabletron Systems Plumbing Product SEHI100TX 22 User Manual

Title Page  
®
Portable Management Application  
for the  
SEHI100TX-22™  
User’s Guide  
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Notice  
Cabletron Systems reserves the right to make changes in speciÞcations and other information  
contained in this document without prior notice. The reader should in all cases consult Cabletron  
Systems to determine whether any such changes have been made.  
The hardware, Þrmware, or software described in this manual is subject to change without notice.  
IN NO EVENT SHALL CABLETRON SYSTEMS BE LIABLE FOR ANY INCIDENTAL, INDIRECT,  
SPECIAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES WHATSOEVER (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED  
TO LOST PROFITS) ARISING OUT OF OR RELATED TO THIS MANUAL OR THE INFORMATION  
CONTAINED IN IT, EVEN IF CABLETRON SYSTEMS HAS BEEN ADVISED OF, KNOWN, OR  
SHOULD HAVE KNOWN, THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.  
Virus Disclaimer  
Cabletron has tested its software with current virus checking technologies. However, because no  
anti-virus system is 100% reliable, we strongly caution you to write protect and then verify that the  
Licensed Software, prior to installing it, is virus-free with an anti-virus system in which you have  
conÞdence.  
Cabletron Systems makes no representations or warranties to the effect that the Licensed Software is  
virus-free.  
Copyright © 1998 by Cabletron Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.  
Printed in the United States of America.  
Order Number: 9031975-E2 April 1998  
Cabletron Systems, Inc.  
P.O. Box 5005  
Rochester, NH 03866-5005  
SPECTRUM, MiniMMAC, FNB, Multi Media Access Center, and DNI are registered trademarks,  
and Portable Management Application, IRM, IRM2, IRM3, IRBM, ESXMIM, ETSMIM, EMME,  
EMM-E6, ETWMIM, FDMMIM, FDCMIM, MicroMMAC, MRXI, MRXI-24, NB20E, NB25E, NB30,  
NB35E, NBR-620, SEHI, TRBMIM, TRMM, TRMM-2, TRMM-4, TRMMIM, TRXI, Media Interface  
Module, MIM, and Flexible Network Bus are trademarks of Cabletron Systems, Inc.  
UNIX and OPENLOOK are trademarks of Unix System Laboratories, Inc. OSF/Motif and Motif  
are trademarks of the Open Software Foundation, Inc. X Window System is a trademark of  
X Consortium, Inc. Ethernet and XNS are trademarks of Xerox Corporation. Apple and AppleTalk  
are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. Banyan is a registered trademark of Banyan  
Systems, Inc. DECnet is a registered trademark of Digital Equipment Corporation. Novell is a  
registered trademark of Novell, Inc. CompuServe is a registered trademark of CompuServe. Sun  
Microsystems is a registered trademark, and Sun, SunNet, and OpenWindows are trademarks of Sun  
Microsystems, Inc.  
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Cabletron Systems, Inc., 35 Industrial Way, Rochester, New Hampshire 03867-0505.  
2. (a) This computer software is submitted with restricted rights. It may not be used, reproduced, or  
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Contents  
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Chapter 1  
Introduction to SPMA  
for the SEHI100TX-22  
How to use the SEHI User’s Guide; manual conventions; contacting Cabletron Global Call Center;  
SEHI firmware versions supported by SPMA  
The SEHI100TX-22 is an intelligent repeating Fast Ethernet hub, which when  
combined with the SEH100TX-22 non-intelligent stackable hub, can provide from  
22 to as many as 120 100Base-TX Ethernet connections in a single stack. Each  
SEHI100TX-22 and SEH100 TX-22 provides front panel ports for network  
connections, and a rear-panel HUBStack Interconnect Bus port for stackable  
connections.  
The SEHI100TX-22 intelligent stackable hub is designed to manage one or more of  
the SEH100TX-22 non-intelligent stackables. It provides 22 100Base-TX network  
ports via RJ45 connectors and one optional user-conÞgurable EPIM port (which  
allows for ßexible network connection options, including SMA or ST Þber optic  
cable, thin coax, or AUI cable). Although the SEHI100TX-22 is the management  
device, providing full packet and error statistics for the stack, it can be located  
anywhere in the stack.  
Each SEH100TX-22 non-intelligent hub provides 22 100Base-TX network ports  
via RJ45 connectors and two optional user-conÞgurable EPIM ports. Up to four  
SEH100TX-22s can be included in the stack. The entire stack is counted as only  
one repeater hop.  
The SEHI100TX-22 fully conforms to the IEEE 802.3 Repeater, AUI, and 10BASE-T  
speciÞcations. It will transmit re-timed data packets, regenerate preamble, extend  
fragments, arbitrate collisions, and automatically partition problem segments.  
1-1  
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Introduction to SPMA for the SEHI100TX-22  
Using the SEHI User’s Guide  
Your SPECTRUM Portable Management Application (SPMA) for the  
SEHI100TX-22 consists of a number of different applications, each of which  
provides a portion of the overall management functionality. Each of these  
applications can be accessed from the icon menu (if you are using a management  
platform) and from the command line (if you are running in stand-alone mode);  
in addition, several applications can also be accessed from within the Hub View, a  
graphical display of the SEHI and its ports.  
The SEHI UserÕs Guide describes how to use many of the applications included  
with the module; note that the instructions provided in this guide apply to the  
SEHI100TX regardless of the operating system or management platform you are  
using. Instructions for launching each individual function from the command line  
(stand-alone mode) are also included in each chapter.  
Following is a description of the applications described in this guide; while we  
provide as much background information as we can, we do assume that youÕre  
familiar with Ethernet networks and general network management concepts:  
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Chapter 1, Introduction to SPMA for the SEHI100TX-22, describes the  
SEHI 100 TX-22 UserÕs Guide and the conventions used in this and other  
SPMAmanuals, explains where to Þnd information about the SEHI100TX, and  
tells you how to contact Cabletron Systems Global Call Center.  
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Chapter 2, Using the SEHI100TX Hub View, describes the visual display of  
the Hub and explains how to use the mouse within the Hub View. The  
operation of some basic functions available only from within the Hub View  
(changing the Hub View display, opening menus and windows, enabling and  
disabling ports, checking device and port status, and so on) are also described.  
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Chapter 3, Link/Seg Traps, describes how to conÞgure link and segmentation  
traps to suit your management needs. You can access the Link/Seg Traps  
application from the icon menu, the Hub View, or the command line.  
Chapter 4, Redundancy, describes how to conÞgure redundant circuits to keep  
your network connections up and running in the event of a single portÕs  
failure. You can access the Redundancy application from the icon menu, the  
Hub View, or the command line.  
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Appendix A, SEHI100TX MIB Components, lists the IETF MIBs supported by  
the SEHI100TX, and describes their arrangement in a series of MIB  
components. A description of the objects controlled by each component is also  
included.  
What’s NOT in the SEHI100TX User’s Guide . . .  
The following standard SPMA tools are available through the SEHI100TX module  
and are explained in the SPECTRUM Portable Management Application Tools  
Guide:  
1-2  
Using the SEHI User’s Guide  
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Introduction to SPMA for the SEHI100TX-22  
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Charts, Graphs, and Meters  
Community Names  
MIB I,II  
MIBTree  
TFTP Download  
Trap Table  
Utilities (Global Community Names, Find MAC Address and TFTP)  
Graphing capabilities are provided by an application that is included in HP Network  
Node Manager and IBM NetView; therefore, graphs are only available when SPMA is  
run in conjunction with one of these network management platforms. If you are running  
SPMA in a stand-alone mode or in conjunction with SunNet Manager or Solstice  
Enterprise Manager, no graphing options will be displayed on buttons or menus. Note  
that the screens displayed in this guide will include the graph-related options where they  
are available; please disregard these references if they do not apply.  
NOTE  
Charts, Graphs, and Meters are accessible from the Hub View and the command  
line; the Utilities, and MIBTree applications are accessible from the platform  
console window Tools menu, the Stand-alone Launcher applications menu, or the  
command line; and the rest of the tool applications (except Telnet) are available  
from the icon menu, the Hub View, or the command line. (The Telnet application  
is available only from the icon menu or the command line.)  
Instructions on discovering Cabletron devices, creating icons, and accessing the  
icon menus within your management platform are included in your Installing  
and Using SPECTRUM for ... guide. If you are using SPMA for the SEHI100TX in  
stand-alone mode Ñ that is, without beneÞt of a speciÞc network management  
system Ñ instructions for starting each application from the command line are  
included in each chapter of this guide and the SPMA Tools Guide.  
Conventions  
The family of SPECTRUM Portable Management Applications can work with a  
number of different network management systems running on several different  
operating systems and graphical user interfaces. This versatility presents two  
documentation problems: Þrst, there is no standard terminology; and second, the  
appearance of the windows will differ based on the graphical interface in use. For  
the sake of consistency, the following conventions will be followed throughout  
this and other SPMA guides.  
Conventions  
1-3  
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Introduction to SPMA for the SEHI100TX-22  
Screen Displays  
SPMA runs under a variety of different operating systems and graphical user  
interfaces. To maintain a consistent presentation, screen displays in this and other  
SPMA guides show an OSF/Motif environment. If youÕre used to a different GUI,  
donÕt worry; the differences are minor. Buttons, boxes, borders, and menus  
displayed on your screen may look a bit different from what you see in the guide,  
but theyÕre organized and labelled the same, located in the same places, and  
perform the same functions in all screen environments.  
Some windows within SPMA applications can be re-sized; those windows will  
display the standard window resizing handles employed by your windowing  
system. Re-sizing a window doesnÕt re-size the information in the window; it just  
changes the amount of information that can be displayed (see Figure 1-1). When  
you shrink a window, scroll bars will appear as necessary so that you can scroll to  
view all the information that is available.  
Use the scroll bars  
provided to choose  
what to display in a  
window that’s been  
resized  
Click here to  
display footer  
message history  
Figure 1-1. Window Conventions  
Some windows will also contain a  
button; selecting this button  
launches a History window (Figure 1-2) which lists all footer messages that have  
been displayed since the window was Þrst invoked. This window can help you  
keep track of management actions you have taken since launching a management  
application.  
1-4  
Conventions  
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Introduction to SPMA for the SEHI100TX-22  
Figure 1-2. The History Window  
Using the Mouse  
The UNIX mouse has three buttons, as shown in Figure 1-3. Procedures within the  
SPMA document set refer to these buttons as follows:  
Button 1  
Button 2  
Button 3  
Figure 1-3. Mouse Buttons  
If youÕre using a two-button mouse, donÕt worry. SPMA doesnÕt make use of  
mouse button 2. Just click the left button for button 1 and the right mouse button  
when instructed to use mouse button 3.  
Conventions  
1-5  
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Introduction to SPMA for the SEHI100TX-22  
Whenever possible, we will instruct you on which mouse button to employ;  
however, menu buttons within SPMA applications will operate according to the  
convention employed by the active windowing system. By convention, menu  
buttons under the Motif windowing environment are activated by clicking the left  
mouse button (referred to as mouse button 1 in SPMA documentation), and there  
is no response to clicking the right button (mouse button 3). Under  
OpenWindows, menu buttons can be activated by clicking the right button, and  
convention dictates that the left button activates a default menu option; within  
SPMA, that default option will also display the entire menu. Because of this  
difference, references to activating a menu button will not include instructions  
about which mouse button to use. All other panels from which menus can be  
accessed, and all buttons which do not provide access to menus, will operate  
according to SPMA convention, as documented.  
Getting Help  
If you need technical support related to SPMA, or if you have any questions,  
comments, or suggestions related to this manual or any of our products, please  
feel free to contact the Cabletron Systems Global Call Center. Before calling,  
please have the following information ready:  
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The product name and part number.  
The version number of the program that you need help with. SPMA is  
modular, which means each application will have a speciÞc revision number.  
Where applicable, an INFO button provides the version number; you can also  
view the version number for any application by typing the command to start  
the application followed by a -v.  
You can contact the Cabletron Systems Global Call Center via any of the following  
methods:  
By phone:  
Monday through Friday between 8 AM and 8 PM  
Eastern Standard Time at (603) 332-9400  
By mail:  
Cabletron Systems, Inc.  
PO Box 5005  
Rochester, NH 03866-5005  
By Internet mail:  
FTP:  
ftp.ctron.com (134.141.197.25)  
Login  
anonymous  
Password  
your email address  
By BBS:  
(603) 335-3358  
Modem Setting  
8N1: 8 data bits, 1 stop bit, No parity  
1-6  
Getting Help  
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Introduction to SPMA for the SEHI100TX-22  
For additional information about Cabletron Systems products, visit our  
World Wide Web site: http://www.cabletron.com/. For technical support,  
select Service and Support.  
SEHI100TX Firmware  
SPMA support for the SEHI100TX has been tested against Þrmware version  
1.00.06; if you have an earlier version of Þrmware and experience problems  
running SPMA, contact Cabletron Systems Global Support Center for upgrade  
information.  
As a general rule, Þrmware versions for new products are liable to change rapidly; contact  
the Cabletron Systems Global Support for upgrade information for the latest customer  
release of Þrmware.  
NOTE  
Year 2000 Compliance  
Previous users of SPMA will note a few display changes related to Year 2000  
compliance. All SPMA applications now have the ability to display a four-digit  
year value where this information is available. For example, the Stand-alone  
Launcher window Ð which uses your workstationÕs system time value to display  
the time and date of the last contact change Ð will now display these date values  
with eight digits (05/31/1998) instead of six (05/31/98).  
Please keep in mind, however, that SPMAÕs ability to display a four-digit year  
value in device-speciÞc windows Ð such as the Device Status window available  
from the Hub View or the Bridge View Ð is dependent on the ÞrmwareÕs ability to  
provide a four-digit value. Not all Þrmware versions support this ability; contact  
Cabletron SystemsÕ Global Call Center for information speciÞc to your device  
Þrmware.  
SEHI100TX Firmware  
1-7  
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Introduction to SPMA for the SEHI100TX-22  
1-8  
SEHI100TX Firmware  
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Chapter 2  
Using the SEHI100TX Hub View  
Navigating through the Hub View, monitoring hub performance; managing the hub  
The heart of SPECTRUM Portable Management Applications (SPMA) for the  
SEHI100TX is the Hub View, a graphical interface that gives you access to many of  
the functions that provide control over the device.  
Using the Hub View  
There are two ways to open the Hub View: if you are working within a network  
management system, you can select the Hub View option from the icon menu;  
speciÞc directions for creating a SEHI100TX icon and accessing the icon menu can  
be found in the appropriate Installing and Using SPECTRUM for... guide. If you  
are running the SEHI100TX module in a stand-alone mode, type the following at  
the command line:  
spmarun hubstack <IP address> <community name>  
The community name you use to start the module must have at least Read access;  
for full management functionality, you should use a community name that  
provides Read/Write or Superuser access. For more information on community  
names, consult the appropriate Installing and Using SPECTRUM for... guide,  
and/or the Community Names chapter in the SPMA Tools Guide.  
The spmarun script invoked Þrst in the above command temporarily sets the environment  
NOTE  
variables SPMA needs to operate; be sure to use this command any time you launch an  
application from the command line. This script is automatically invoked when you launch  
an application from the icon menu or from within the Hub View.  
If there is a hostname mapped to your SEHI100TXÕs IP address, you can use <hostname>  
in place of <IP address> to launch the Hub View. Please note, however, that the hostname  
is not the same as the device name which can be assigned via Local Management and/or  
SPMA; you cannot use the device name in place of the IP address.  
2-1  
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Using the SEHI100TX Hub View  
Navigating Through the Hub View  
Within the Hub View (Figure 2-1), you can click mouse buttons in different areas  
of the window to access various menus and initiate certain management tasks.  
The following sections describe the information displayed in the Hub View Front  
Panel and how to use the mouse in the Hub View Ports Display.  
Front Panel  
Device summary information  
Figure 2-1. The SEHI100TX Hub View  
Hub View Front Panel  
In addition to the graphical display of the modules, the Hub View gives you  
device level summary information. The following Front Panel information  
appears below the port display in the Hub View:  
Contact Status is a color code that shows the status of the connection between  
SPMA and the device:  
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Green means a valid connection.  
Blue means that SPMA is trying to reach the device but doesnÕt yet know if the  
connection will be successful.  
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Red means that SPMA is unable to contact or has lost contact with the device.  
2-2  
Using the Hub View  
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Using the SEHI100TX Hub View  
Uptime  
The time that the device has been running without interruption. The counter  
resets to 0 days 00:00:00 (HH:MM:SS) when one of the following occurs:  
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Power to the device is cycled.  
The device is reset manually.  
Date and Time  
The date and time are taken from the deviceÕs internal clock. You can set the  
device date and time using the Device Status window; refer to page 2-10 for  
details.  
Device Name  
A text Þeld that you can use to help identify the device. You can edit the device  
name using the Device Status window; refer to page 2-10 for details.  
Location  
A text Þeld that you can use to help identify the device. You can edit the device  
location using the Device Status window; refer to page 2-10 for details.  
If you have assigned a device name or location that contains more than 18 characters, only  
the last 18 will be displayed in the Hub View. Check the Device Status window for the  
complete name and/or location, if necessary.  
NOTE  
IP Address  
The deviceÕs Internet Protocol address. You cannot change the SEHI100TXÕs IP  
address from SPMA.  
MAC Address  
The deviceÕs factory-set hardware address. The MAC address cannot be changed.  
Using the Hub View  
2-3  
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Using the SEHI100TX Hub View  
Clicking on the Device button displays the Device menu, Figure 2-2.  
Figure 2-2. SEHI100TX Hub View Device Menu  
The Device menu lets you perform the following:  
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Open the Device Status window  
Open the Repeater Status window  
Open the Polling Intervals window  
Open the Statistics windows  
Create device-level Pie Charts and Graphs or Meters  
Change the Port Display Form  
Launch the Link/Seg Traps application  
Launch the Redundancy application  
Graphing capabilities are provided by an application that is included in HP Network  
Node Manager and IBM NetView; therefore, graphs are only available when SPMA is  
run in conjunction with one of these network management platforms. If you are running  
SPMA in a stand-alone mode or in conjunction with SunNet Manager or Solstice  
Enterprise Manager, no graphing options will be displayed on buttons or menus. Note  
that the screens displayed in this guide will include the graph-related options where they  
are available; please disregard these references if they do not apply.  
NOTE  
2-4  
Using the Hub View  
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Using the SEHI100TX Hub View  
Note that the Device menu does not provide access to every application which is  
available to the SEHI100TX; some information is only available from the Module  
or Port menus, and several applications can only be accessed either from the icon  
menu (if you are running under a network management platform) or from the  
command line (if you are running in stand-alone mode). See Chapter 1,  
Introduction to SPMA for the SEHI100TX-22, for a complete list of applications  
available to the SEHI100TX and how to access each one.  
If you need to call CabletronÕs Global Support about a problem with the Hub  
View application, youÕll need the information provided in the Info window  
SPMA for the SEHI100TX  
application version  
SEHI100TX firmware revision,  
firmware boot prom version, and  
hardware version  
Figure 2-3. The Hub Information Window  
Clicking mouse button 1 on the Quit button closes all Hub View application  
windows; any open applications which can also be accessed from the command  
line or from the icon menu will remain open.  
Using the Mouse in the Hub View Ports Display  
Each device in your SEHI100TX-managed HUBStack will have its own ports  
display in the Hub View; you can access the available ports displays by using the  
scroll bar located on the right side of the Hub View Ports Display window, as  
illustrated in Figure 2-4. The illustration below also indicates how to use the  
mouse to access the Module and Port menus and functions.  
Using the Hub View  
2-5  
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Using the SEHI100TX Hub View  
Port Display Form  
Port Status  
Using the Module or Device  
menus, you can change the port  
display form shown in the Port  
Status boxes to any one of the  
following:  
The Port Status display changes  
with the type of port display  
format selected. Statistical  
selections display values in a  
statistic/second format. Load  
displays traffic as a percentage  
of theoretical maximum  
capacity. Port Type displays port  
status (ON, OFF, NLK, etc.).  
Click mouse button 1 to toggle  
the port between enabled and  
disabled; click mouse button 3  
to display the Port menu.  
- Load (% of theoretical maximum)  
- Traffic (Pkts/sec)  
- Collisions (Colls/sec)  
Module Type  
- Errors (Errors/sec, total or  
by type)  
Displays the type of module,  
or device, whose ports are  
currently being displayed in  
the Ports Display.  
- Frame Sizes (% of total packets)  
- Port Type (Admin/Link Status,  
Admin Status, or Active Ports)  
Module Index  
Scroll Bar  
Port Index  
Indicates the module’s position in  
the SEHI100TX-managed stack; the  
SEHI100TX itself is always #1  
(regardless of its actual location in  
the stack). Click mouse button 1 to  
open the Module Status window;  
click mouse button 3 to display the  
Module menu.  
Use the scroll bar to  
rotate through the Ports  
Display for each hub in  
the SEHI100TX-  
Click mouse button 3 to  
display the Port menu.  
managed stack.  
Figure 2-4. Mousing Around The Ports Display  
2-6  
Using the Hub View  
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Using the SEHI100TX Hub View  
Hub View Port Color Codes  
The Port Status boxes in the Hub View are color coded to indicate the portÕs  
connection status. The colors are consistent for all Port Display Forms except  
Admin Status; the exceptions are noted below.  
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Green indicates that the port is active; that is, the port has been enabled by  
management, has a valid Link signal (if applicable), and is able to  
communicate with the station at the other end of the portÕs cable segment.  
Note that anAUI or transceiver port will display as active as long as it has been  
enabled by management, even if no cable is connected.  
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Blue indicates that the port has been disabled through management.  
Yellow indicates that the port is enabled but does not currently have a valid  
connection. This usually indicates that the device at the other end of the  
segment is turned off.  
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Red indicates that the port is enabled, but is not able to pass packets. This  
generally means that the port has been segmented by management after  
experiencing an excessive number of collisions; for a BNC (thin coax) port,  
however, this may only mean that no cable or terminator has been connected.  
When the Admin Status port display option is active, only two colors apply: a  
port will be displayed in green if it is enabled by management, regardless of  
whether or not there is a cable attached or a valid link signal detected; a port  
disabled by management will display as blue.  
Monitoring Hub Performance  
The information displayed in the Hub View can give you a quick summary of  
device activity, status, and conÞguration. SPMA can also provide further details  
about device performance via its three-level menu structure. The Device, Module,  
and Port menus (Figure 2-5) give you control over the device at these three levels  
and give you access to the tools, menus, and windows that let you monitor  
speciÞc aspects of device performance, change hub display options, and set  
SEHI100TX operating and notiÞcation parameters. Remember, though many  
functions will operate the same at each level, those accessed via the Device menu  
control or provide information about the SEHI100TX-managed stack as a whole;  
those accessed via the Module menu control or provide information about a  
single hub in the stack; and those accessed via the Port menu control or provide  
information about a single port.  
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Figure 2-5. The SEHI100TXÕs Device, Module, and Port Menus  
Hub performance data available through these menus includes:  
¥
¥
Device, Module, and Port status descriptions.  
Device, Module, and Port statistics, which provide a complete breakdown of  
packet activity.  
¥
Device, Module, and Port-level pie charts, graphs, and meters, for a graphical  
representation of the types and levels of trafÞc passing through the device.  
(For more information about pie charts, graphs, and meters, see the Charts,  
Graphs, and Meters chapter in the SPMA Tools Guide.)  
Port Display Form  
You can change the type of information displayed for each port in the device by  
using the Port Display Form option on the Device and Module menus. Changing  
the port display form via the Device menu will affect all ports in the SEHI100TX-  
controlled stack; changing the display form via the Module menu will affect only  
those ports on the selected device.  
To change the port display form:  
1. Click on  
to display the Device menu, or on the Module Index box  
to display the Module menu.  
2. Drag down to Port Display Form, then right as necessary to select one of the  
port display options.The current selection will be displayed in the Port Display  
Form field on the port display.  
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Port display form options are:  
Load  
Shows a percentage for each active port that represents that portÕs portion of the  
theoretical maximum trafÞc level Ñ for Ethernet interfaces, 10 megabits per  
second; for Fast Ethernet interfaces, 100 megabits per second.  
Traffic  
Displays port trafÞc data in a packets/second format.  
Collisions  
Displays port trafÞc data in a collisions/second format. The SEHI100TX counts  
both receive collisions Ñ those collisions it detects while receiving a transmission  
Ñ and transmit collisions Ñ those it detects while transmitting (i.e., a port in the  
SEHI100TX-managed stack transmitted one of the colliding packets); however,  
those counts are combined and a single total value is displayed.  
Errors  
Shows port trafÞc errors in an errors/second format. You can display any one of  
the following types of errors:  
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
Total errors  
Alignment errors  
CRC (Cyclic Redundancy Check) errors  
Runts  
Giants  
OOW (Out-of-Window) Collisions  
For error type descriptions, see Checking Statistics, page 2-16.  
Frame Sizes  
Displays a percentage for each active port that represents what portion of that  
portÕs trafÞc is of a speciÞc size, measured in bytes. You can display any one of the  
following frame sizes:  
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
Runts (packets with fewer than 64 bytes)  
64-127  
128-255  
256-511  
512-1023  
1024-1518  
Giants (packets with more than 1518 bytes)  
For the statistical port display form options listed above, three dashes (- - -) will display  
for all inactive ports; any active (green) port will display a numeric value, even if itÕs  
0.0000.  
NOTE  
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Port Type  
Provides the following administrative information about the port:  
¥
Admin/Link Status indicates the connection status of the port:  
-
-
-
-
ON indicates that the port has a valid link signal or does not support a link  
signal.  
OFF indicates that the port has been turned off through management  
action.  
NLK (No Link) indicates that the port does not have a link to a device at  
the other end of the cable, or that there is no cable attached.  
SEG (Segmented) indicates that the port has been segmented by the  
repeater due to an excessive collision level.  
Because BNC thin coax, AUI, and transceiver ports do not support the link feature, the  
displayed Admin/Link status for those ports may be misleading: for example, a BNC port  
will display as segmented when, in fact, there is no cable or terminator attached or the  
cable has been disconnected; an AUI or transceiver port will display as on (with a valid  
link signal) even when no cable is attached. Be sure to keep these anomalies in mind when  
troubleshooting a device so equipped.  
NOTE  
¥
Admin Status displays either ON or OFF, an indication of whether  
management has the port enabled or disabled. A port can be ON but not  
operational; for example, under the Admin display, ports that are segmented  
or not linked are shown as ON.  
¥
Active Ports displays either YES or NO for any active (green) port, indicating  
whether or not that port has seen any trafÞc at all since the device was last  
initialized or the counters were last reset; this port display form can tell you  
whether any port whose statistics are not currently incrementing has seen  
some activity in the past. Non-green (presumably inactive) ports will display  
three dashes (---), regardless of their past statistical activity.  
Checking Device Status and Updating Front Panel Info  
The Device Status window (Figure 2-6) is where you change the information  
displayed on the Hub View Front Panel and where you can see summary  
information about the current state of the device.  
To open the Device Status window:  
1. Click on  
to display the Device menu.  
2. Drag down to Status and release.  
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Figure 2-6. The Device Status Window  
Name and Location  
These text Þelds help identify this SEHI100TX-controlled HUBStack. The  
information you enter in the Name and Location boxes is written to the  
SEHI100TXÕs MIB and appears on the Hub View front panel.  
Contact  
Use the Contact box to record the name and phone number of the person  
responsible for the device. Note that the information entered here is not displayed  
on the Hub View front panel.  
Date and Time  
Displays the current date and time from the SEHI100TXÕs internal clock.  
Although the Þelds are static in the window, the front panel display is a real-time  
presentation.  
To change the name, location, contact, date, or time:  
1. Highlight the appropriate field and type the new values.  
2. Press Enter or Return on the keyboard to save each change before moving  
on to another; each change will appear on the front panel as soon as Enter or  
Return is pressed.  
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If your device Þrmware can accept four-digit year values, the Date Þeld will allow you to  
NOTE  
enter the year portion in one-, two-, or four-digit format. If you choose to enter one or two  
digits for the year, any value greater than or equal to 88 will be presumed to be in the  
1900s; a value of 87 or less is presumed to be in the 2000s. No matter which entry format  
you choose, the year will still be displayed and set as a four-digit value.  
If your device Þrmware cannot accept four-digit year values, the Date Þeld will allow you  
to enter the year portion in one- or two-digit format (with leading zeros supplied  
automatically for single-digit entries). No presumption is made about the century, and  
any two-digit year value (from 00 to 99) will be accepted.  
Attempts to set the date may result in one of three different error messages. Two of these  
messages will indicate that the wrong number of digits has been used for the year value,  
and will indicate the appropriate number of digits to use for the selected device; the third  
message will indicate that the entered date is invalid because it is not an actual calendar  
date (such as 02/29 in a non-leap year, any month value greater than 12, or any day value  
greater than 31).  
Chassis Type  
Displays the type of chassis used for the device (stand-alone).  
Checking Module Status  
You can open a Module Status window (Figure 2-7) for any device in the  
SEHI100TX-controlled stack. To open the Module Status window:  
1. Click mouse button 1 in the Module Index box. (Use the scroll bar to the right  
of the ports display to scroll through the available modules.)  
or  
1. Click mouse button 3 in the Module Index box to display the Module menu.  
2. Drag down to Status and release.  
Figure 2-7. The Module Status Window  
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Name  
This text Þeld can help identify the module, or device; the information entered  
here does not appear anywhere else in the Hub View.  
To edit the Module Name:  
1. Highlight the text in the Name box and type in a new name.  
2. Press Enter or Return on the keyboard to save your changes.  
Active Users  
This Þeld is not supported by the SEHI100TX-22.  
Module Type  
The type of module you are viewing.  
Checking Repeater Status  
The Repeater Status window (Figure 2-8) allows you to assign a name to the  
SEHI100TX-controlled HUBStack as a whole. To open the Repeater Status  
window:  
1. Click on the Device button to display the Device menu.  
2. Drag down to Repeater Status and release.  
Figure 2-8. The Repeater Status Window  
Name  
This Þeld can help identify the SEHI100TX-controlled stack as a whole; the  
information entered here is not displayed anywhere else in the Hub View.  
To edit the Repeater Name:  
1. Highlight the text in the Name box and type in a new name.  
2. Press Enter or Return on the keyboard to save your changes.  
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Active Users  
This Þeld is not supported by the SEHI100TX-22.  
Checking Port Status  
You can open a Port Status window (Figure 2-9) for any port in the SEHI100TX-  
controlled HUBStack. To open the Port Status window:  
1. Click mouse button 3 in the Port Index or Port Status box to display the Port  
menu.  
2. Drag down to Status and release.  
Figure 2-9. The Port Status Window  
Note that the window title includes the module and port number in parentheses;  
the rest of the window contains the following Þelds:  
Name  
This text Þeld can help identify the port; the information entered here is not  
displayed anywhere else in the Hub View.  
To edit the Name:  
1. Highlight the text in the Name box and type in a new name.  
2. Press Enter or Return on the keyboard to save your change.  
Link Status  
The portÕs Link Status tells you whether or not the port has a valid connection to  
the node at the other end of the cable segment. The possible Link conditions are:  
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¥
¥
¥
Active Ñ The port has a valid connection with the device at the other end of  
the portÕs cable.  
Inactive Ñ The device at the other end of the cable is turned off, there is a  
break in the cable, or there is no device or cable connected.  
Not Supported Ñ The selected port does not support the Link feature, so the  
SEHI100TX cannot determine link status; this value will show only for thin  
coax (BNC), AUI, or transceiver ports.  
The fact that thin coax (BNC), AUI, and transceiver ports do not support the link feature  
can cause some misleading port status indicators: for example, a BNC port may show as  
segmented when, in fact, the cable has been disconnected; or an AUI or transceiver port  
may appear to have an active link when no cable has been attached. You should keep these  
anomalies in mind when troubleshooting a device so equipped.  
NOTE  
¥
Unknown Ñ The SEHI100TX canÕt determine a link status.  
Status  
The portÕs Status can be one of three states:  
¥
Segmented Ñ A port becomes segmented (that is, disabled by the repeater  
module) when the port experiences 32 consecutive collisions, or when the  
portÕs collision detector is on for longer than approximately 2 to 3  
milliseconds.  
Because they do not support the link feature, thin coax (BNC) ports will display as  
segmented when there is no cable or terminator attached or the cable or terminator has  
been disconnected (i.e., a Òno linkÓ condition).  
NOTE  
¥
¥
Active Ñ The port is operating normally.  
Unknown Ñ The SEHI100TX cannot determine port status.  
Active Users  
This Þeld is not supported by the SEHI100TX.  
Media Type  
Indicates the type of cable segment connected to the port. The supported media  
types are:  
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
Twisted Pair: RJ45 conn(ector)  
BNC EPIM  
AUI EPIM  
Transceiver Port: AUI EPIM  
Twisted Pair: RJ45 EPIM  
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¥
¥
¥
Multi-Mode Fiber: SMA EPIM  
Multi-Mode Fiber: ST EPIM  
Single-Mode Fiber: ST EPIM  
Topology Type  
Indicates how the port is being used. The available types are:  
¥
Station Ñ The port is receiving packets from no devices, a single device, or  
two devices. Note that a port in station status may actually be connected to  
multiple devices; station status simply indicates that no more than two devices  
are currently active.  
¥
¥
Trunk Ñ The port is receiving packets from three or more devices; it may be  
connected to a coax cable with multiple taps, or to a repeater or another MIM.  
Unknown Ñ The SEHI100TX cannot determine the topology status.  
Checking Statistics  
The Hub View can provide a summary of Ethernet statistics at the Device,  
Module, and Port levels, as shown in Figure 2-10. The windows that display the  
statistics contain the same statistical categories at each level.  
Figure 2-10. The Repeater Statistics Windows (Device Level)  
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To view device statistics at the Device, Module, or Port levels:  
1. Display the Device, Module, or Port menu by clicking mouse button 3 in the  
appropriate area (refer to Figure 2-5, page 2-8).  
2. Drag down to Statistics and then right to either General/Errors or Frames  
and release.  
The Hub View begins counting the selected statistics when you open the window;  
counts will be cumulative until you use the Reset button or close the window.  
When a device is reset, statistics windows and/or statistics displays in the Hub View may  
display very large numbers for one polling interval. This is due to the resetting of the  
counters.  
NOTE  
Because the SEHI100TX does not currently support Protocol counts, the Protocol Þelds  
in the Frames window will be grayed-out.  
Note that the module statistics windows include the module number in the  
window title; the port statistics windows include the module and port numbers in  
the window title.  
General/Error Statistics  
The General/Errors statistics windows display the following Þelds:  
Received Bytes  
The number of bytes of data received by this device, module, or port since the  
window was last opened or reset.  
Total Packets  
The number of packets of all types received by this device, module, or port since  
the window was last opened or reset.  
Avg Packet Size  
The number of bytes per packet received by this device, module, or port since the  
window was last opened or reset. The average packet size is calculated by  
dividing the number of bytes received by the number of packets received.  
Broadcast Packets  
The number of broadcast packets received by this device, module, or port since  
the window was last opened or reset. Broadcast packets have a single address  
recognized by each station on the net: this address is designated in IP form as  
255.255.255.255, or in MAC hexadecimal form as FF-FF-FF-FF-FF-FF. The ARP  
and RARP requests sent by bridges and routers are broadcast packets.  
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Multicast Packets  
The number of multicast packets received by this device, module, or port since  
the window was last opened or reset. Multicast packets are simultaneously  
addressed to more than one address, but fewer than all addresses.  
Collisions  
The number of collisions recorded by this device, module, or port since the  
window was last opened or reset. The SEHI100TX counts both receive collisions  
Ñ those detected while a port is receiving data Ñ and transmit collisions Ñ those  
detected while a port is transmitting data (i.e., the port has transmitted one of the  
colliding packets); however, these counts are combined and a single total value is  
displayed. Collisions of this type (called ÒlegalÓ collisions, as opposed to the  
OOW collisions described below) are a natural by-product of a busy network; if  
you are experiencing high numbers of collisions, it may be time to redirect  
network trafÞc by using bridges or routers. Extremely high collision rates can also  
indicate a data loop (redundant connections) or a hardware problem (some  
station transmitting without listening Þrst).  
Total Errors  
The number of errors of all types recorded by this device, module, or port since  
the window was last opened or reset.  
Alignment Errors  
The number of misaligned packets recorded since the window was last opened or  
reset. Misaligned packets are those which contain any unit of bits which is less  
than a byte Ñ in other words, any group of bits fewer than 8. Misaligned packets  
can result from a packet formation problem, or from some cabling problem that is  
corrupting or losing data; they can also result from packets passing through more  
than two cascaded multi-port transceivers (a network design which does not meet  
accepted Ethernet spec).  
CRC Errors  
CRC, or Cyclic Redundancy Check, errors occur when packets are somehow  
damaged in transit. When each packet is transmitted, the transmitting device  
computes a frame check sequence (FCS) value based on the contents of the packet,  
and appends that value to the packet. The receiving station performs the same  
computation; if the FCS values differ, the packet is assumed to have been  
corrupted and is counted as a CRC error. CRC errors can result from a hardware  
problem causing an inaccurate computation of the FCS value, or from some other  
transmission problem that has garbled the original data. The CRC error counter  
shows the total number of CRC errors recorded since the window was last  
opened or reset.  
OOW Collisions  
The number of out-of-window collisions recorded since the window was last  
opened or reset. OOW collisions occur when a station receives a collision signal  
while still transmitting, but more than 51.2 µsec (the maximum Ethernet  
propagation delay) after the transmission began. There are two conditions which  
can cause this type of error: either the networkÕs physical length exceeds IEEE  
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Using the SEHI100TX Hub View  
802.3 speciÞcations, or a node on the net is transmitting without Þrst listening for  
carrier sense (and beginning its illegal transmission more than 51.2 µs after the  
Þrst station began transmitting). Note that in both cases, the occurrence of the  
errors can be intermittent: in the case of excessive network length, OOW collisions  
will only occur when the farthest stations transmit at the same time; in the case of  
the node which is transmitting without listening, the malfunctioning node may  
only fail to listen occasionally, and not all of its failures to listen will result in  
OOW collisions Ñ some may simply result in collisions (if the 51.2 µs window has  
not yet closed), and some will get through Þne (if no one else happens to be  
transmitting).  
Runt Frames  
The number of received packets smaller than the minimum Ethernet frame size of  
64 bytes (excluding preamble). This minimum size is tied to the maximum  
propagation time of an Ethernet network segment Ñ the maximum propagation  
time is 51.2 µs, and it takes approximately 51.2 µs to transmit 64 bytes of data;  
therefore, every node on the segment should be aware that another node is  
transmitting before the transmission is complete, providing for more accurate  
collision detection. Runts can sometimes result from collisions, and, as such, may  
be the natural by-product of a busy network; however, they can also indicate a  
hardware (packet formation), transmission (corrupted data), or network design  
(more than four cascaded repeaters) problem.  
Giant Frames  
The number of received packets that are longer than the maximum Ethernet size  
of 1518 bytes (excluding preamble). Giant packets typically occur when you have  
a jabbering node on your network Ñ one that is continuously transmitting, or  
transmitting improperly for short bursts Ñ probably due to a bad transmitter on  
the network interface card. Giant packets can also result from packets being  
corrupted as they are transmitted, either by the addition of garbage signal, or by  
the corruption of the bits that indicate frame size.  
The SEHI100TX Error Priority Scheme  
Each Cabletron device employs an error priority scheme which determines how  
packets with multiple errors will be counted, and ensures that no error packet is  
counted more than once. The priority scheme for the SEHI100TX counts errors in  
the following order:  
1. OOW Collisions  
2. Runts  
3. Giants  
4. Alignment Errors  
5. CRC Errors  
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Knowing the priority scheme employed by the SEHI100TX can tell you a lot about  
the error counts you are seeing. For example, you know that the number of  
packets counted as CRC errors had only CRC errors Ñ they were of legal size (not  
runts or giants) and had no truncated bytes. You also know that any packet less  
than 64 bytes long has been counted as a runt, even if it also had alignment  
and/or CRC problems (which is likely if the runt is the result of a collision or  
other transmission problem).  
Frames Statistics  
The Frames statistics windows display the following Þelds:  
Frame Sizes  
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
Runt Frames (packets smaller than 64 bytes)  
64-127 (byte) Frames  
128-255 Frames  
256-511 Frames  
512-1023 Frames  
1024-1518 Frames  
Giant Frames (packets larger than 1518 bytes)  
Because the SEHI100TX does not currently support Protocol counts, the Protocol Þelds  
in the Frames window will be grayed-out.  
NOTE  
Managing the Hub  
In addition to the performance information described in the preceding sections,  
the Hub View also provides you with the tools you need to conÞgure your  
HUBStack and keep it operating properly. Hub management functions include  
setting polling intervals, enabling ports at the module and port level, and  
disabling ports at the port level.  
Setting the Polling Intervals  
To set the polling intervals used by SPMA and the SEHI100TX:  
1. Click on the Device button to display the Device menu.  
2. Drag down to Polling Intervals, and release. The SEHI100TX Polling  
Intervals window, Figure 2-11, will appear.  
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Figure 2-11. The Polling Intervals Window  
3. To activate the desired polling, click mouse button 1 on the selection box to  
the right of each polling type field.  
4. To change a polling interval, highlight the value you would like to change, and  
enter a new value in seconds. Note that the Use Defaults option must not be  
selected, or values will revert back to default levels when you click on Apply,  
and your changes will be ignored.  
5. If you wish to use your new polling interval settings as the default values that  
SPMA will use for each SEHI100TX-controlled stack you are managing, use  
mouse button 1 to select the Save As Defaults option.  
6. If you wish to replace existing values with the current set of default values, use  
mouse button 1 to select the Use Defaults option.  
7. Click mouse button 1 on the Apply button once your changes are complete.  
Changes take effect after the current polling cycle is complete.  
You can set the update intervals for the following:  
Contact Status  
This polling interval controls how often the SEHI100TX is ÒpingedÓ to check  
SPMAÕs ability to maintain a connection with the device.  
Device General Status  
This polling interval controls how often the Hub View Front Panel Information Ñ  
such as Uptime, Device Name, and so forth Ñ and some port status information  
is updated.  
Managing the Hub  
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Device Configuration  
This polling interval controls how often a survey is conducted of the devices  
installed in your SEHI100TX-controlled HUBStack.  
Port Operational State  
This polling interval controls the update of the information displayed in the Port  
Status boxes for each port in the device. Port state information includes link state  
(the color code) and admin state (on or off).  
Statistics  
This polling interval controls how often the information displayed in the Port  
Status boxes is updated when the Port Display Form is set to a rate or percentage,  
and how often the Device, Module, and Port statistics counts are updated.  
SPMA generates network trafÞc when it retrieves the above-described information; keep  
in mind that shorter intervals mean increased network trafÞc. Range limits for these  
polling times are 0-999,999 seconds; however, an entry of 0 will be treated as a 1.  
NOTE  
Enabling/Disabling Ports  
You can enable and disable ports both from the Module menu, which affects all  
ports on a single module, or device; or from the Port menu, which affects  
individual ports.  
To enable or disable an individual port:  
1. Click mouse button 1 on the Port Status box to toggle the port On or Off.  
or  
1. Click mouse button 3 on the Port Index or Port Status box to display the Port  
menu.  
2. Drag down to Enable or Disable, as appropriate, and release. The selected  
port changes color when its state changes. A disabled port is blue.  
To enable or disable all ports in a module:  
1. Click mouse button 3 on the Module Index box to open the Module menu.  
2. Drag down to Enable All Ports or Disable All Ports, as appropriate, and  
release.  
When disabling all ports on a module, make sure you donÕt disable the port through which  
your management station is communicating with the HUBStack, or you will lose contact  
with the stack.  
!
CAUTION  
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Chapter 3  
Link/Seg Traps  
About Link and Segmentation traps; enabling and disabling these traps at the device, module, and port  
levels  
Among the traps which Cabletron devices are designed to generate are traps  
which indicate when a repeater port gains or loses a link signal, when the repeater  
segments (disconnects) a port due to collision activity, and when a segmented  
port becomes active again. In some networks, these Link and Segmentation traps  
may be more information than a network manager wants to see. So SPMA  
provides you with a means to selectively enable and disable Link and  
Segmentation traps. You can turn traps on and off for all ports on the SEHI100TX,  
all ports on a selected module or modules, or for individual ports.  
SPMA does not accept the trap messages; that task is left to your network management  
NOTE  
system. (See the appropriate network management system documentation for details  
about viewing trap messages.) When this utility is used in stand-alone mode, traps will  
either be ignored when they return to the workstation from which you are running SPMA  
for the SEHI100TX, or they will turn up at another management workstation which has  
been conÞgured to accept traps. Note also that, regardless of the conÞguration performed  
using this utility, NO traps will be sent by the device unless its trap table has been  
properly conÞgured; see the SEHI100TX hardware manual and/or the Trap Table chapter  
in the SPMA Tools Guide for more information.  
What is a Segmentation Trap?  
CabletronÕs Ethernet repeaters count collisions at each port. If a port experiences  
32 consecutive collisions, the repeater segments the port to isolate the source of  
the collisions from the rest of the network. When the repeater segments a port, it  
generates a portSegmenting trap. As soon as a segmented port receives a good  
packet, the repeater reconnects the port to the network and generates a  
portUnsegmenting trap.  
3-1  
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Link/Seg Traps  
Unterminated BNC (thin coax) ports appear in the Hub View as segmented ports. When  
you attach a thin coax cable or a 50 terminator to a port, the repeater generates a  
portUnsegmenting trap; when you remove the cable or terminator, the repeater  
generates a portSegmenting trap. Note also that devices at both ends of the cable will  
generate the portUnsegmenting and portSegmenting traps, even if only one end of the  
cable has been disconnected.  
NOTE  
What is a Link Trap?  
Some Cabletron Ethernet repeater ports Ñ including RJ45 twisted pair and Þber  
optic ports Ñ generate a link signal to monitor the status of their connection with  
the device at the other end of the cable segment. If the cable is removed or broken,  
the portÕs link status goes to ÒNo LinkÓ and the repeater generates a  
portLinkDown trap. When a port in a ÒNo LinkÓ condition receives a link signal,  
the port goes to a ÒLinkÓ condition and the repeater generates a portLinkUp trap.  
Note that devices at both ends of the disconnected or broken cable will generate  
the portLinkDown and portLinkUp traps, even when only one end of the cable  
has been removed.  
BNC (thin coax), AUI, and transceiver ports do not support a link signal. As described  
above, BNC ports respond to changes in link status by generating portSegmenting and  
portUnsegmenting traps; AUI and transceiver ports do not respond at all to changes in  
link status (unless the port has been segmented due to excessive collisions), and will  
always display as on, even if no cable is connected.  
NOTE  
Enabling and Disabling Link/Seg Traps  
Although each Cabletron device comes with a number of traps built into the  
Þrmware, no device will generate these traps unless it is conÞgured to do so. This  
can be accomplished via Local Management (by enabling traps and entering your  
workstationÕs IP address in the Community Names screen), or via the SPMA Trap  
Table utility, accessible from the icon menu or from the command line. Once traps  
as a whole have been enabled, you can use the Link/Seg Traps feature to  
selectively enable and disable link and segmentation traps as required by your  
network management needs.  
To open the Repeater Link/Seg Traps window:  
from the icon:  
1. Click on the appropriate SEHI100TX icon to display the icon menu.  
2. Drag down to Link/Seg Traps and release.  
3-2  
What is a Link Trap?  
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Link/Seg Traps  
from the Hub View:  
1. Click on  
to display the Device menu.  
2. Drag down to Link/Seg Traps and release.  
from the command line (stand-alone mode):  
1. From the appropriate directory, type  
spmarun r4hwtr <IP address> <community name>  
The spmarun script invoked Þrst in the above command temporarily sets the environment  
variables SPMA needs to operate; be sure to use this command any time you launch an  
application from the command line. This script is automatically invoked when you launch  
an application from the icon menu or from within the Hub View.  
NOTES  
If you wish to change any Link/Seg Trap settings, be sure to use a community name with  
at least Read/Write access. If you only wish to view current settings, a community name  
with Read access will be sufÞcient.  
If there is a hostname mapped to your SEHI100TXÕs IP address, you can use  
<hostname> in place of <IP address> to launch this application. Please note, however,  
that the hostname is not the same as the device name which can be assigned via Local  
Management and/or SPMA; you cannot use the device name in place of the IP address.  
The main Repeater Link/Seg Traps window, Figure 3-1, will appear.  
Figure 3-1. The Repeater Link/Seg Traps Window  
Enabling and Disabling Link/Seg Traps  
3-3  
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Link/Seg Traps  
Configuring Link/Seg Traps for the Repeater  
To enable or disable Link and Segmentation traps for all ports on a repeater:  
1. In the Repeater Link/Seg Traps window, click mouse button 1 on the repeater  
interface for which you would like to configure link and segmentation traps.  
2. Click mouse button 1 on  
; the Channel X Link/Seg Traps  
window, Figure 3-2, will appear.  
Figure 3-2. The Channel X Link/Seg Traps Window  
3. In the Link Traps field, click mouse button 1 on the appropriate selection to  
Enable or Disable link traps for the repeater.  
4. In the Segmenting Traps field, click mouse button 1 on the appropriate  
selection to Enable or Disable segmenting traps for the repeater.  
5. Click mouse button 1 on  
to save your changes; the current status  
will be displayed in each field to the right of the field name. Click on  
to exit the window.  
Viewing and Configuring Link/Seg Traps for Hub Modules  
To enable or disable Link and Segmentation traps for all ports on the selected hub  
module or modules:  
1. In the Repeater Link/Seg Traps window, select a repeater interface in the  
scroll list.  
2. Click mouse button 1 on  
will appear.  
; the Module Traps window, Figure 3-3,  
3-4  
Enabling and Disabling Link/Seg Traps  
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Link/Seg Traps  
Figure 3-3. The Module Traps Window  
3. In the Module Traps window, click mouse button 1 to select the module for  
which you wish to configure link and segmentation traps.  
If the Set Trap Status For field displays Selected Modules (the default  
setting), you can click to select any modules; to de-select any highlighted  
module, click on it again.  
If the selection All Modules is displayed in the Set Trap Status For field,  
all available modules will be automatically selected; if you de-select any  
module, the Set Trap Status For field will automatically revert to the  
Selected Modules setting.  
To change the setting in the Set Trap Status For field, click on the currently  
displayed setting, and drag down to select a new setting.  
4. Click on the appropriate selection in the LinkTraps field to Enable or Disable  
link traps for the selected modules, as desired.  
5. Click on the appropriate selection in the SegmentingTraps field to Enable or  
Disable segmenting traps, as desired.  
6. Click on  
window.  
to save your changes; click on  
to exit the  
Enabling and Disabling Link/Seg Traps  
3-5  
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Link/Seg Traps  
Viewing and Configuring Link/Seg Traps for Ports  
To enable or disable Link and Segmentation traps for individual ports:  
1. In the Repeater Link/Seg Traps window, select a repeater in the scroll list.  
2. Click mouse button 1 on  
will appear.  
; the Port Traps window, Figure 3-4,  
Figure 3-4. The Port Traps Window  
3. In the Port Traps window, click mouse button 1 to select the port or ports for  
which you wish to configure traps.  
If the Set Trap Status For field displays Selected Ports (the default  
setting), you can click to select any ports; to de-select any highlighted port,  
click on it again.  
If the selection All Ports on Module is displayed in the SetTrap Status For  
field, you can select only one port at a time; trap status will be set for all  
ports on the same module as the selected port.  
If the selection All Ports on Repeater is displayed in the Set Trap Status  
For field, all available ports will be automatically selected; if you de-select  
any port, the Set Trap Status For field will automatically revert to the  
Selected Ports setting.  
3-6  
Enabling and Disabling Link/Seg Traps  
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Link/Seg Traps  
To change the setting in the Set Trap Status For field, click on the currently  
displayed setting, and drag down to select a new setting.  
4. Click on the appropriate selection in the LinkTraps field to Enable or Disable  
link traps for the selected ports, as desired.  
5. Click on the appropriate selection in the SegmentingTraps field to Enable or  
Disable segmenting traps, as desired.  
6. Click on  
window.  
to save your changes; click on  
to exit the  
Enabling and Disabling Link/Seg Traps  
3-7  
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Link/Seg Traps  
3-8  
Enabling and Disabling Link/Seg Traps  
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Chapter 4  
Repeater Redundancy  
Configuring and enabling redundant circuits; monitoring redundant circuits  
Setting Network Circuit Redundancy  
The redundancy application gives you the ability to deÞne redundant circuits for  
your SEHI100TX to ensure that critical network connections remain operational.  
Each circuit has a designated primary port and one or more backup ports. The  
SEHI100TX monitors the link status of the primary portÕs connection to one or  
more network IP addresses; if the link fails, the SEHI100TX automatically  
switches trafÞc to a backup port.  
Before you conÞgure redundancy, make sure that only the primary physical link is  
connected to the network. If a backup port is connected before you conÞgure and enable  
redundancy, you create a data loop.  
NOTE  
To open the main Repeater Redundancy window:  
from the icon:  
1. Click on the appropriate device icon to display the icon menu.  
2. Drag down to Redundancy and release.  
from the Hub View:  
1. Click on  
to display the Device menu.  
2. Drag down to Redundancy and release.  
4-1  
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Repeater Redundancy  
from the command line (stand-alone mode):  
1. From the appropriate directory, type:  
spmarun r4red <IP address> <community name>  
The spmarun script invoked Þrst in the above command temporarily sets the environment  
variables SPMA needs to operate; be sure to use this command any time you launch an  
application from the command line. The script is automatically invoked when you launch  
the application from the icon menu or from within the Hub View.  
NOTES  
If you wish to change any redundancy settings, be sure to use a community name with at  
least Read/Write access. If you only wish to view current settings, a community name  
with Read access will be sufÞcient.  
If there is a hostname mapped to your SEHI100TXÕs IP address, you can use <hostname>  
in place of <IP address> to launch this application. Please note, however, that the  
hostname is not the same as the device name which can be assigned via Local  
Management and/or SPMA; you cannot use the device name in place of the IP address.  
The main Repeater Redundancy window, Figure 4-1, will appear.  
Figure 4-1. The Repeater Redundancy Window  
Configuring a Redundant Circuit  
To establish or edit a redundant circuit:  
1. In the Repeater Redundancy window, click mouse button 1 on the repeater  
interface for which you would like to edit or establish a redundant circuit, then  
click  
. The Channel X Redundancy window, Figure 4-2, will appear.  
4-2  
Setting Network Circuit Redundancy  
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Repeater Redundancy  
Figure 4-2. The Channel X Redundancy Window  
2. If you want to change a circuit’s name or the number of retries, highlight the  
appropriate circuit and click  
. The Change Circuit  
window, Figure 4-3, will appear.  
Figure 4-3. The Change Circuit Window  
Setting Network Circuit Redundancy  
4-3  
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Repeater Redundancy  
a. In the Name box, enter a new circuit name (up to 16 alphanumeric  
characters).  
b. In the Retries box, enter the number of retries — that is, the number of  
times the SEHI100TX tests the connection to the first IP address listed in  
the Circuit Addresses list box before it gives up and moves on to the next  
address. The valid range of retries you can enter into this field is 0-16.  
c. Be sure to click on  
changes.  
before exiting the window to save your  
3. With the appropriate Circuit Name highlighted, click  
Add Circuit Address window, Figure 4-4.  
to access the  
Figure 4-4. The Add Circuit Address Window  
You can use this window to define IP addresses of up to 8 devices on the  
network. These addresses identify the destination nodes that the SEHI100TX  
looks for to determine the status of the active link. If the device determines  
that it has lost the link with the first address in the Circuit Addresses list, it  
checks the link status with the next address. If it can’t establish a link with any  
address in the list, the device switches traffic to a backup port.  
a. To add a circuit address, enter a valid network IP address and then click  
. Repeat as necessary to add additional addresses. Click  
to exit the window.  
The SEHI100TX will poll the circuit addresses in the order they were entered.  
NOTE  
b. To delete a circuit address, highlight the address in the Circuit Addresses  
list in the Channel X Redundancy window, and click  
.
4. Use the bottom half of the Channel X Redundancy window to define the  
primary/active and backup ports for a Circuit:  
a. In the Circuit list, highlight the Circuit Name of interest, and click  
to ensure that the Status of the circuit is set to  
Disabled before configuring the port list.  
4-4  
Setting Network Circuit Redundancy  
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Repeater Redundancy  
b. Specify up to 8 ports that will act as the redundant connections by using  
the Module and Port boxes to indicate each port, and then clicking on  
to enter each port into the circuit.  
c. By default, all ports are created as Inactive Backup ports.You should  
designate both a Primary port and an Active port. Typically, you would  
configure the same port to be both Primary and Active, but this is not  
required.  
To select a primary port, click button 1 on a port to highlight it, then click  
. Usually, the Primary port will also be your active port.  
Should your Primary port not be designated as the active port, it will  
switch to Backup/Inactive status when the circuit is initially enabled, but it  
will become the active port on the execution of the next test sequence  
(assuming it has a valid link at the time of testing).  
To select the initially active port, click on a port (whether or not it has  
already been selected as Primary), and click  
. The port  
designated as Active will be the initial port through which the link is  
checked. Should the active port fail, redundancy will start at the top of the  
port list and activate the next backup port, then work through the  
remaining ports in sequence should the first backup fail.  
All backup ports will be disabled as soon as you enable the redundant circuit. The ports  
remain disabled until they become active due to primary port failure. If you disable the  
redundant circuit, you must manually enable each backup port in that circuit.  
NOTES  
Note also that if an active port fails, and then is repaired, it is not returned to active status  
until the circuit has been Tested (unless all other backup ports on the circuit have failed in  
the interim).  
5. Once you have configured all the ports that compose the redundant circuit,  
enable the circuit by clicking  
.
Be sure to make all physical connections to the backup ports once the redundant circuit  
has been conÞgured and enabled.  
NOTE  
To clear the settings in one circuit, highlight the Circuit Name that you want to  
clear, and click on  
.
Setting Network Circuit Redundancy  
4-5  
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Repeater Redundancy  
To clear all redundancy conÞgurations, click on  
portion of the window. Reset does the following:  
in the All Circuits  
¥
¥
¥
¥
Deletes all entries in the Circuit Addresses box  
Changes the status of every Circuit to Disabled  
Reverts to previous Circuit Name(s)  
Clears all module and port entries  
After clearing redundancy settings by either method, backup ports remain disabled until  
you manually reenable them so that data loops do not occur. Before you enable the ports,  
disconnect their physical connections.  
NOTE  
Monitoring Redundancy  
Once you have conÞgured your redundant circuits, you can use the Þelds in the  
All Circuits box to set the parameters that the SEHI100TX uses to periodically test  
each of the circuits.  
The circuit test checks the current status of every port link, both primary and  
backup, by polling the IP addresses in each circuitÕs Polling Addresses list  
through each port conÞgured as part of the circuit. This test can be performed at a  
pre-determined time, or manually at any time. If the test detects any problems  
with the ports on a circuit, whether active or backup, it will issue traps identifying  
the circuit and its problem ports.  
SPMA does not accept the trap messages; that task is left to your network management  
system. (See the appropriate network management system documentation for details  
about viewing trap messages.) Note also that NO traps will be sent by the device unless  
its trap table has been properly conÞgured; see the SEHI100TX hardware manual and/or  
the Trap Table chapter in the SPMA Tools Guide for more information.  
NOTE  
The testing begins at each circuitÕs currently active port; all ports are tested in  
sequence. Once testing is Þnished, the circuits will be reset so that the port  
designated as Primary will become the active port; if the primary port is not  
operational, the next operational backup port will be activated.  
The SEHI100TX automatically polls all enabled circuits through the Primary port  
and all Backup ports at the time speciÞed in the Test Time box. If the Þrst poll fails  
(results in a no link condition with all of the circuit IP addresses), the SEHI100TX  
checks the circuitÕs Retries Þeld. If Retries is greater than 0, the SEHI100TX waits  
the number of seconds speciÞed in the Poll Interval Þeld, and then polls the  
circuit again.  
4-6  
Monitoring Redundancy  
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Repeater Redundancy  
To set the Poll Interval:  
1. In the All Circuits box, type in a new value in the Poll Interval field and click  
. Poll Interval is the time in seconds between retries (if the first  
attempt is unsuccessful).  
To set the Test Time:  
1. In the All Circuits box, type a new test time in the Test Time field in a 24-hour  
HH:MM:SS format and click  
. The Test Time is the time of day when  
the SEHI100TX polls the addresses listed in each of the enabled circuits.  
To immediately test all enabled circuits:  
1. Click  
in the All Circuits box.  
Monitoring Redundancy  
4-7  
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Repeater Redundancy  
4-8  
Monitoring Redundancy  
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Appendix A  
SEHI100TX MIB Structure  
SEHI100TX management information base configuration  
IETF MIB Support  
In addition to its proprietary features, the SEHI100TX currently supports the  
following IETF MIB:  
¥
RFC 1213 MIB for Network Management of TCP/IP-based Internets: MIB-II  
SEHI100TX MIB Structure  
CabletronÕs newer intelligent devices Ñ like the SEHI100TX Ñ organize MIB data  
into a series of Òcomponents.Ó A MIB component is a logical grouping of MIB  
data, and each group controls a deÞned set of objects. For example, SEHI100TX  
repeater information resides in its Repeater component; more generic device and  
port information resides in the SEHI100TX Chassis MGR component.  
The SEHI100TX MIB consists of Þve components, each of which is described  
below. To see the names of the MIB components in your SEHI100TX, bring up the  
Community Names application, or use any SNMP Get operation that will allow  
you to view the contents of the chCompTable.  
The SEHI100TX MIB consists of the following components:  
SEHI100TX Chassis MGR  
The Chassis MGR MIB component contains most of the basic information about  
the SEHI100TX, including: the SEHI100TXÕs MIB component information (in the  
chCompTable), device names, hardware revision numbers, MAC and IP  
addresses, the current time and date, and information related to redundancy,  
alarms, and TFTP download. The system, interfaces, at, ip, icmp, udp, and snmp  
groups from MIB-II are also included. The community names assigned to this  
MIB component provide the gateway that all SPMA applications use to access all  
A-1  
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SEHI100TX MIB Structure  
information in the other components, even if those components have different  
community names; the Chassis MGR community names are the same as those  
assigned via Local Management.  
SEHI100TX LIM  
The SEHI100TX LIM, or Local Management, component contains the objects that  
provide out-of-band management via the Console port on the SEHI100TXÕs front  
panel. No objects from this component are used for remote management.  
Repeater One  
The Repeater MIB component controls all repeater functionality on the  
SEHI100TX. These functions include port count, port enable/disable, port status,  
board number, repeater statistics (packets, bytes, collisions, errors, etc.), protocol  
counts, and frame sizes; also included are the alarm, redundancy, source  
addressing, and trap functions. Note that the default community names for the  
Repeater MIB component will always be different from the default names  
assigned to all the other components.  
SEHI100TX Host Services  
The Host Services MIB component contains the objects that provide the  
SEHI100TX with its IP functionality Ñ essentially, those functions which allow  
the SEHI100TX to operate over a network Ñ including functions such as ping,  
Telnet, and TFTP.  
SEHI100TX IP Services  
The IP Services MIB component is not currently used by the SEHI100-TX, but is  
reserved for future use.  
A Brief Word About MIB Components and Community Names  
In the original version of the component MIB architecture, each MIB component is  
protected by its own set of user-conÞgurable Read-Only, Read/Write, and Super-  
User community names. These names determine the level of access that will be  
granted to the information controlled by each individual component. For these  
devices, the central point of access for remote management is provided by the  
Chassis MGR MIB component Ñ that is, if you deÞne your device icon or launch  
a management application using the read-only, read/write, or super-user  
community name assigned to the Chassis MGR MIB component, your SPMA  
application is granted the appropriate level of access (read-only, read/write, or  
super-user) to all of that deviceÕs MIB information Ñ even if the other MIB  
components have different community names (as will occur of necessity if the  
SEHI100TX has multiple Repeater MIB components, each of which must have a  
unique set of community names).  
A-2  
SEHI100TX MIB Structure  
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SEHI100TX MIB Structure  
The set of community names you assign via Local Management are those which apply to  
NOTE  
the SEHI100TX Chassis MGR MIB component.  
Newer versions of devices with this component-based MIB architecture have  
been simpliÞed somewhat; these devices support a single, global set of community  
names, with small modiÞcations added automatically to accommodate multiple  
instances of the same MIB component (such as network components). Again,  
deÞning your device icon or launching a management application with one of  
these global community names gives SPMA access to all MIB information.  
Where community names may become an issue, however, is when you are using  
the MIBTree or any similar MIB-based tool (such as those provided by SunNet  
Manager or HP Network Node Manager) to access MIB information. For these  
kinds of tools, you must supply the precise community name assigned to the  
component that contains the information you want. For devices which support  
the original component-based MIB architecture Ñ such as the SEHI100TX, this  
means you must use the exact community name you have assigned to a speciÞc  
component to access that componentÕs MIB information. (Again, note that the  
SEHI100TXÕs Repeater components always have unique community names.) For  
devices which support the new global community names, you must make note of  
the automatic modiÞcations that are made for network components, and use  
those speciÞc community names when trying to access information stored in  
those components.  
The MIB component descriptions provided above will serve as a roadmap for  
determining where the information youÕre interested in is located; you can use the  
SPMA Community Names tool (described in Chapter 3 of the SPMA Tools Guide)  
to determine whether your version of Þrmware supports the original component-  
based MIB architecture, or the new global community names. The Community  
Names tool also allows you to both view and set the community names which  
apply to your device.  
SEHI100TX MIB Structure  
A-3  
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SEHI100TX MIB Structure  
A-4  
SEHI100TX MIB Structure  
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Index  
A
E
F
B
C
G
H
I
D
L
Index-1  
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Index  
M
S
N
O
T
P
port display form  
U
R
V
Index-2  
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