HP 9304M User manual

Category
Software
Type
User manual

This manual is also suitable for

advanced
configuration and
management guide
www.hp.com/go/hpprocurve
hp procurve routing switches
9304m, 9308m, and 6308m-sx
and the hp procurve switch
6208m-sx
(software release
6.6.
x
and 7.1.
x)
Book 2:
Advanced Configuration and
Management Guide
for the HP ProCurve Routing Switches
9304M, 9308M, 6308M-SX
and the HP ProCurve Switch 6208M-SX
(Software Releases 6.6.X and 7.1.X)
Copyright 2000
Hewlett-Packard Company
All rights reserved. Reproduction, adaptation or
translation without prior written permission is
prohibited, except as allowed under the copyright
laws.
Publication number
5969-2363
December 2000
Applicable Products
HP J4138A, HP J4139A, HP J4840A, HP J4841A
Trademark Credits
Microsoft
®
, Windows
®
, Microsoft Windows NT
®
and
Internet Explorer
®
are U.S. trademarks of Microsoft
Corporation. Netscape
®
Navigator is a U.S.
trademark of Netscape Communications
Corporation. Cisco
®
is a trademark of Cisco
Systems Inc.
Disclaimer
The information contained in this document is
subject to change without notice.
HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY MAKES NO
WARRANTY OF ANY KIND WITH REGARD TO
THIS MATERIAL, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Hewlett-Packard shall not be liable for errors
contained herein or for incidental or consequential
damages in connection with the furnishing,
performance or use of this material.
Hewlett-Packard assumes no responsibility for the
use or reliability of its software on equipment that is
not furnished by Hewlett-Packard.
A copy of the specific warranty terms applicable to
your HP product and replacement parts can be
obtained from your HP Sales and Service Office or
authorized dealer.
Warranty
See the Customer Support and Warranty booklet
included with the product.
A copy of the specific warranty terms applicable to
your Hewlett-Packard products and replacement
parts can be obtained from your HP Sales and
Service Office or authorized dealer.
Safety Considerations
Prior to the installation and use of this product,
review all safety markings and instructions.
Instruction Manual Symbol.
If the product is marked with the above symbol, refer
to the product manual to protect the product from
damage.
WARNING Denotes a hazard that can cause injury.
CAUTION Denotes a hazard that can damage
equipment or data.
Do not proceed beyond a WARNING or CAUTION
notice until you have understood the hazard and
have taken appropriate precautions.
Use of control, adjustments or performance
procedures other than those specified herein may
result in hazardous radiation exposure.
Grounding
This product provides a protective earthing terminal.
There must be an uninterrupted safety earth ground
from the main power source to the products input
wiring terminals, power cord or supplied power cord
set. Whenever it is likely that the protection has
been impaired, disconnect the power cord until the
ground has been restored.
If your LAN covers an area served by more than one
power distribution system, be sure their safety
grounds are securely interconnected.
LAN cables may occasionally be subject to
hazardous transient voltages (such as lightning or
disturbances in the electrical utilities power grid).
Handle exposed metal components of the network
with caution.
For more safety information, see Safety and EMS
Regulatory Statements in the Installation and
Getting Started Guide.
Servicing
There are no user-serviceable parts inside the user-
installable modules comprising the product. Any
servicing, adjustment, maintenance or repair must
be performed only by service-trained personnel.
ii
Organization of Product Documentation
Read Me First
The Read Me First document includes software release information, a brief Getting Started section, an
accessory parts list, troubleshooting tips, operating notes, and other information that is not included elsewhere in
the product documentation.
NOTE: HP periodically updates Read Me First. The latest version is available at
http://www.hp.com/go/hpprocurve. (Click on Technical Support, then Manuals.)
Main Product Coverage
The main product documentation for your switch or routing switch includes:
Book 1: Installation and Getting Started Guide. Book 1 contains the product Safety and EMC Regulatory
statements as well as installation, security, and basic configuration information. A printed copy of this guide is
included with your HP product. An electronic copy is also included as a PDF (Portable Document Format) file
on the CD shipped with your HP product.
Book 2: Advanced Configuration and Management Guide. Book 2 (this manual) contains advanced
configuration information for routing protocols, Spanning Tree Protocol (STP), Quality of Service (QoS), and
Virtual LANs (VLANs). In addition, appendixes in this guide contain reference information for network
monitoring, policies and filters, and software and hardware specifications. This manual is included in a PDF
(Portable Document Format) file on the CD shipped with your HP product.
Book 3: Command Line Interface Reference. Book 3 provides a dictionary of CLI commands and syntax. An
electronic copy of this reference is included as a PDF (Portable Document Format) file on the CD shipped
with your HP product.
These documents also are available in PDF file format on HP's ProCurve website.
NOTE: In Book 2, most of the chapters apply only to the HP 9304M, HP 9308M, and HP 6308M-SX routing
switches (and not the HP 6208M-SX switch). However, the QoS, ACL, STP, and VLAN chapters, and appendixes
A and B apply to the HP 6208M-SX switch as well as the routing switches.
Product CD: A Tool for Finding Specific Information and/or Printing Selected Pages
This CD is shipped with your HP product and provides the following:
A README.txt file (or README.pdf file) describing the CD contents and use, including easy instructions on
how to search the book files for specific information
A contents.pdf file to give you easy access to Book 1, Book 2, and the CLI Reference on the CD
Separate PDF files of the individual chapters and appendixes in Book 1 and Book 2, enabling you to easily
print individual chapters, appendixes, and selected pages
Single PDF files for each of the books, enabling you to use the Adobe® Acrobat® Reader to easily search for
detailed information
An Adobe Acrobat Reader (in case you don't already have a reader installed on your PC)
Additional files. These may include such items as a copy of the device software (OS), additional Readme
files, and updates to network management software (HP TopTools for Hubs & Switches).
Supplements and Release Notes
These documents describe features that became available between revisions of the main product documentation.
Depending on when new features are released, you may or may not receive any supplements or release notes
with your HP product. New releases of such documents will be available on HP's ProCurve website. To register
to receive email notice from HP when a new software release is available, go to
http://www.hp.com/go/hpprocurve and click on Technical Support, then Software.
iii
iv
Contents
GETTING STARTED...................................................................................... 1-1
INTRODUCTION ...........................................................................................................................................1-1
A
UDIENCE ..................................................................................................................................................1-1
N
OMENCLATURE .........................................................................................................................................1-1
T
ERMINOLOGY ............................................................................................................................................1-2
R
ELATED PUBLICATIONS .............................................................................................................................1-2
W
HATS NEW IN THIS EDITION? ...................................................................................................................1-3
E
NHANCEMENTS ADDED IN SOFTWARE RELEASE 06.6.X .......................................................................1-3
E
NHANCEMENTS ADDED IN SOFTWARE RELEASE 07.1.X .......................................................................1-3
S
UPPORT AND WARRANTY INFORMATION .....................................................................................................1-5
QUALITY OF SERVICE (QOS)....................................................................... 2-1
THE QUEUES ..............................................................................................................................................2-1
A
UTOMATIC QUEUE MAPPING FOR IP TYPE OF SERVICE (TOS) VALUES ...............................................2-2
Q
UEUING METHODS ....................................................................................................................................2-3
S
ELECTING THE QUEUING METHOD .......................................................................................................2-3
C
ONFIGURING THE QUEUES ..................................................................................................................2-4
D
ISPLAYING THE QOS PROFILE CONFIGURATION .......................................................................................2-10
A
SSIGNING QOS PRIORITIES TO TRAFFIC ..................................................................................................2-11
C
HANGING A PORTS PRIORITY ...........................................................................................................2-11
C
HANGING A LAYER 2 PORT-BASED VLANS PRIORITY .......................................................................2-12
R
EASSIGNING 802.1P PRIORITIES TO DIFFERENT QUEUES ...................................................................2-14
A
SSIGNING STATIC MAC ENTRIES TO PRIORITY QUEUES ....................................................................2-16
A
SSIGNING IP AND LAYER 4 SESSIONS TO PRIORITY QUEUES .............................................................2-17
A
SSIGNING APPLETALK SOCKETS TO PRIORITY QUEUES .....................................................................2-25
C
ONFIGURING A UTILIZATION LIST FOR AN UPLINK PORT ............................................................................2-26
D
ISPLAYING UTILIZATION PERCENTAGES FOR AN UPLINK ...........................................................................2-28
USING ACCESS CONTROL LISTS (ACLS)..................................................... 3-1
OVERVIEW ..................................................................................................................................................3-1
v
Advanced Configuration and Management Guide
USAGE GUIDELINES FOR ACCESS CONTROL LISTS (ACLS) ..........................................................................3-2
ACL S
UPPORT ON THE HP PRODUCTS .................................................................................................3-2
ACL ID
S AND ENTRIES .........................................................................................................................3-2
D
EFAULT ACL ACTION .........................................................................................................................3-3
C
ONTROLLING MANAGEMENT ACCESS TO THE DEVICE ..........................................................................3-3
ACL LOGGING .....................................................................................................................................3-3
D
ISABLING OR RE-ENABLING ACCESS CONTROL LISTS (ACLS) ....................................................................3-4
E
NABLING ACL MODE ..........................................................................................................................3-4
DISABLING ACL MODE .........................................................................................................................3-5
C
ONFIGURING STANDARD ACLS .................................................................................................................3-5
S
TANDARD ACL SYNTAX ......................................................................................................................3-6
CONFIGURING EXTENDED ACLS ..................................................................................................................3-9
F
ILTERING ON IP PRECEDENCE AND TOS VALUES ..............................................................................3-10
E
XTENDED ACL SYNTAX ....................................................................................................................3-11
CONFIGURING NAMED ACLS .....................................................................................................................3-18
M
ODIFYING ACLS .....................................................................................................................................3-19
A
PPLYING AN ACL TO A SUBSET OF PORTS ON A VIRTUAL INTERFACE .......................................................3-21
E
NABLING STRICT TCP OR UDP MODE ....................................................................................................3-21
E
NABLING STRICT TCP MODE ............................................................................................................3-22
E
NABLING STRICT UDP MODE ...........................................................................................................3-22
D
ISPLAYING ACLS ....................................................................................................................................3-23
D
ISPLAYING THE LOG ENTRIES ..................................................................................................................3-23
P
OLICY-BASED ROUTING (PBR) ................................................................................................................3-24
C
ONFIGURING PBR ............................................................................................................................3-25
E
NABLING PBR ..................................................................................................................................3-27
C
ONFIGURATION EXAMPLES ...............................................................................................................3-27
RATE LIMITING............................................................................................ 4-1
FIXED RATE LIMITING ..................................................................................................................................4-1
H
OW FIXED RATE LIMITING WORKS ......................................................................................................4-1
C
ONFIGURING FIXED RATE LIMITING .....................................................................................................4-2
D
ISPLAYING FIXED RATE LIMITING INFORMATION ...................................................................................4-3
A
DAPTIVE RATE LIMITING ............................................................................................................................4-4
E
XAMPLES OF ADAPTIVE RATE LIMITING APPLICATIONS .........................................................................4-5
A
DAPTIVE RATE LIMITING PARAMETERS ................................................................................................4-8
H
OW ADAPTIVE RATE LIMITING WORKS ..............................................................................................4-10
C
ONFIGURING ADAPTIVE RATE LIMITING .............................................................................................4-13
C
OMPLETE CLI EXAMPLES .................................................................................................................4-18
D
ISABLING RATE LIMITING EXEMPTION FOR CONTROL PACKETS ..........................................................4-20
CONFIGURING SPANNING TREE PROTOCOL (STP) ....................................... 5-1
CONFIGURING STANDARD STP PARAMETERS ..............................................................................................5-1
STP P
ARAMETERS AND DEFAULTS .......................................................................................................5-2
E
NABLING OR DISABLING THE SPANNING TREE PROTOCOL (STP) .........................................................5-3
C
HANGING STP BRIDGE AND PORT PARAMETERS .................................................................................5-4
D
ISPLAYING STP INFORMATION ............................................................................................................5-7
vi
CONFIGURING ADVANCED FEATURES ........................................................................................................5-13
F
AST PORT SPAN ...............................................................................................................................5-13
F
AST UPLINK SPAN ............................................................................................................................5-15
S
INGLE SPANNING TREE ....................................................................................................................5-17
PVST/PVST+ C
OMPATIBILITY ............................................................................................................5-20
ENABLING PVST/PVST+ STATICALLY ................................................................................................5-21
D
ISPLAYING PVST INFORMATION ........................................................................................................5-22
CONFIGURING IP......................................................................................... 6-1
BASIC CONFIGURATION ...............................................................................................................................6-1
O
VERVIEW ..................................................................................................................................................6-2
IP INTERFACES ....................................................................................................................................6-2
IP P
ACKET FLOW THROUGH A ROUTING SWITCH ..................................................................................6-3
IP R
OUTE EXCHANGE PROTOCOLS .......................................................................................................6-7
IP MULTICAST PROTOCOLS ..................................................................................................................6-7
IP I
NTERFACE REDUNDANCY PROTOCOLS .............................................................................................6-7
N
ETWORK ADDRESS TRANSLATION .......................................................................................................6-8
A
CCESS CONTROL LISTS AND IP ACCESS POLICIES ..............................................................................6-8
B
ASIC IP PARAMETERS AND DEFAULTS ROUTING SWITCHES .....................................................................6-9
W
HEN PARAMETER CHANGES TAKE EFFECT .........................................................................................6-9
IP G
LOBAL PARAMETERS ROUTING SWITCHES .................................................................................6-10
IP I
NTERFACE PARAMETERS ROUTING SWITCHES ............................................................................6-14
B
ASIC IP PARAMETERS AND DEFAULTS HP 6208M-SX ..........................................................................6-16
IP G
LOBAL PARAMETERS HP 6208M-SX ........................................................................................6-16
I
NTERFACE IP PARAMETERS HP 6208M-SX ....................................................................................6-17
C
ONFIGURING IP PARAMETERS ROUTING SWITCHES ..............................................................................6-18
C
ONFIGURING IP ADDRESSES ............................................................................................................6-18
C
ONFIGURING DOMAIN NAME SERVER (DNS) RESOLVER ....................................................................6-21
C
ONFIGURING PACKET PARAMETERS ..................................................................................................6-23
C
HANGING THE ROUTER ID ................................................................................................................6-25
S
PECIFYING A SINGLE SOURCE INTERFACE FOR TELNET, TACACS/TACACS+, OR RADIUS PACKETS ...6-
26
C
ONFIGURING ARP PARAMETERS ......................................................................................................6-27
C
ONFIGURING FORWARDING PARAMETERS .........................................................................................6-32
D
ISABLING ICMP MESSAGES .............................................................................................................6-34
D
ISABLING ICMP REDIRECTS .............................................................................................................6-36
C
ONFIGURING STATIC ROUTES ...........................................................................................................6-36
C
ONFIGURING A DEFAULT NETWORK ROUTE .......................................................................................6-46
C
ONFIGURING IP LOAD SHARING ........................................................................................................6-48
O
PTIMIZING THE IP FORWARDING CACHE ............................................................................................6-60
C
ONFIGURING IRDP ...........................................................................................................................6-62
C
ONFIGURING RARP .........................................................................................................................6-64
C
ONFIGURING UDP BROADCAST AND IP HELPER PARAMETERS ..........................................................6-67
C
ONFIGURING BOOTP/DHCP FORWARDING PARAMETERS ..................................................................6-70
C
ONFIGURING IP PARAMETERS HP 6208M-SX ......................................................................................6-73
C
ONFIGURING THE MANAGEMENT IP ADDRESS AND SPECIFYING THE DEFAULT GATEWAY ....................6-73
vii
Advanced Configuration and Management Guide
CONFIGURING DOMAIN NAME SERVER (DNS) RESOLVER ....................................................................6-74
C
HANGING THE TTL THRESHOLD ........................................................................................................6-76
C
ONFIGURING DHCP ASSIST .............................................................................................................6-76
D
ISPLAYING IP CONFIGURATION INFORMATION AND STATISTICS .................................................................6-80
C
HANGING THE NETWORK MASK DISPLAY TO PREFIX FORMAT ............................................................6-80
DISPLAYING IP INFORMATION ROUTING SWITCHES ...........................................................................6-80
D
ISPLAYING IP INFORMATION HP 6208M-SX .................................................................................6-100
CONFIGURING RIP ...................................................................................... 7-1
ICMP HOST UNREACHABLE MESSAGE FOR UNDELIVERABLE ARPS .......................................................7-1
RIP P
ARAMETERS AND DEFAULTS ...............................................................................................................7-1
RIP GLOBAL PARAMETERS ...................................................................................................................7-1
RIP I
NTERFACE PARAMETERS ..............................................................................................................7-3
C
ONFIGURING RIP PARAMETERS ................................................................................................................7-3
ENABLING RIP .....................................................................................................................................7-3
C
HANGING THE RIP TYPE ON A PORT ...................................................................................................7-4
C
ONFIGURING METRIC PARAMETERS ....................................................................................................7-5
C
HANGING THE ADMINISTRATIVE DISTANCE ..........................................................................................7-6
C
ONFIGURING REDISTRIBUTION ............................................................................................................7-7
C
ONFIGURING ROUTE LEARNING AND ADVERTISING PARAMETERS .........................................................7-9
C
HANGING THE ROUTE LOOP PREVENTION METHOD ...........................................................................7-12
S
UPPRESSING RIP ROUTE ADVERTISEMENT ON A VRRP OR VRRPE BACKUP INTERFACE ...................7-13
C
ONFIGURING RIP ROUTE FILTERS ....................................................................................................7-13
D
ISPLAYING RIP FILTERS ..........................................................................................................................7-16
CONFIGURING OSPF .................................................................................. 8-1
OVERVIEW OF OSPF ..................................................................................................................................8-1
D
ESIGNATED ROUTERS IN MULTI-ACCESS NETWORKS ...........................................................................8-2
D
ESIGNATED ROUTER ELECTION ..........................................................................................................8-3
OSPF RFC 1583
AND 2178 COMPLIANCE ...........................................................................................8-4
R
EDUCTION OF EQUIVALENT AS EXTERNAL LSAS .................................................................................8-4
D
YNAMIC OSPF ACTIVATION AND CONFIGURATION ...............................................................................8-6
D
YNAMIC OSPF MEMORY ....................................................................................................................8-6
C
ONFIGURING OSPF ..................................................................................................................................8-7
C
ONFIGURATION RULES .......................................................................................................................8-7
OSPF P
ARAMETERS ............................................................................................................................8-7
E
NABLE OSPF ON THE ROUTING SWITCH .............................................................................................8-8
A
SSIGN OSPF AREAS ..........................................................................................................................8-9
A
SSIGNING AN AREA RANGE (OPTIONAL) ............................................................................................8-15
A
SSIGNING INTERFACES TO AN AREA ..................................................................................................8-16
M
ODIFY INTERFACE DEFAULTS ...........................................................................................................8-18
B
LOCK FLOODING OF OUTBOUND LSAS ON SPECIFIC OSPF INTERFACES ...........................................8-20
A
SSIGN VIRTUAL LINKS ......................................................................................................................8-20
M
ODIFY VIRTUAL LINK PARAMETERS ...................................................................................................8-23
D
EFINE REDISTRIBUTION FILTERS .......................................................................................................8-24
M
ODIFY DEFAULT METRIC FOR REDISTRIBUTION .................................................................................8-27
viii
ENABLE ROUTE REDISTRIBUTION ........................................................................................................8-28
D
ISABLE OR RE-ENABLE LOAD SHARING .............................................................................................8-30
C
ONFIGURE EXTERNAL ROUTE SUMMARIZATION .................................................................................8-31
C
ONFIGURE DEFAULT ROUTE ORIGINATION .........................................................................................8-32
M
ODIFY SPF TIMERS .........................................................................................................................8-33
MODIFY REDISTRIBUTION METRIC TYPE ..............................................................................................8-33
M
ODIFY ADMINISTRATIVE DISTANCE ....................................................................................................8-34
C
ONFIGURE OSPF GROUP LINK STATE ADVERTISEMENT (LSA) PACING .............................................8-34
MODIFY OSPF TRAPS GENERATED ....................................................................................................8-35
M
ODIFY OSPF STANDARD COMPLIANCE SETTING ...............................................................................8-36
M
ODIFY EXIT OVERFLOW INTERVAL ....................................................................................................8-37
MODIFY THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF ROUTES .......................................................................................8-37
M
ODIFY LSDB LIMITS ........................................................................................................................8-38
D
ISPLAYING OSPF INFORMATION ..............................................................................................................8-39
DISPLAYING GENERAL OSPF CONFIGURATION INFORMATION ..............................................................8-39
D
ISPLAYING OSPF AREA INFORMATION ..............................................................................................8-40
D
ISPLAYING OSPF NEIGHBOR INFORMATION ......................................................................................8-41
D
ISPLAYING OSPF INTERFACE INFORMATION ......................................................................................8-43
D
ISPLAYING OSPF ROUTE INFORMATION ............................................................................................8-43
D
ISPLAYING OSPF EXTERNAL LINK STATE INFORMATION ....................................................................8-45
D
ISPLAYING OSPF LINK STATE INFORMATION .....................................................................................8-46
D
ISPLAYING THE DATA IN AN LSA .......................................................................................................8-46
D
ISPLAYING OSPF VIRTUAL NEIGHBOR INFORMATION .........................................................................8-47
D
ISPLAYING OSPF VIRTUAL LINK INFORMATION ..................................................................................8-47
D
ISPLAYING OSPF ABR AND ASBR INFORMATION .............................................................................8-48
D
ISPLAYING OSPF TRAP STATUS .......................................................................................................8-48
CONFIGURING IP MULTICAST PROTOCOLS................................................... 9-1
OVERVIEW OF IP MULTICASTING .................................................................................................................9-1
M
ULTICAST TERMS ...............................................................................................................................9-1
C
HANGING GLOBAL IP MULTICAST PARAMETERS .........................................................................................9-2
C
HANGING IGMP PARAMETERS ............................................................................................................9-2
E
NABLING HARDWARE FORWARDING FOR ALL FRAGMENTS OF IP MULTICAST PACKETS .........................9-4
PIM D
ENSE OVERVIEW ...............................................................................................................................9-4
I
NITIATING PIM MULTICASTS ON A NETWORK ........................................................................................9-4
P
RUNING A MULTICAST TREE ...............................................................................................................9-4
G
RAFTS TO A MULTICAST TREE ............................................................................................................9-6
C
ONFIGURING PIM .....................................................................................................................................9-7
E
NABLING PIM ON THE ROUTING SWITCH AND AN INTERFACE ...............................................................9-7
M
ODIFYING PIM GLOBAL PARAMETERS ................................................................................................9-8
M
ODIFYING PIM INTERFACE PARAMETERS ..........................................................................................9-11
PIM S
PARSE OVERVIEW ...........................................................................................................................9-12
PIM S
PARSE ROUTER TYPES .............................................................................................................9-12
RP P
ATHS AND SPT PATHS ...............................................................................................................9-13
C
ONFIGURING PIM SPARSE ......................................................................................................................9-13
L
IMITATIONS IN THIS RELEASE ............................................................................................................9-13
ix
Advanced Configuration and Management Guide
CONFIGURING GLOBAL PARAMETERS ..................................................................................................9-14
C
ONFIGURING PIM INTERFACE PARAMETERS ......................................................................................9-14
C
ONFIGURING PIM SPARSE GLOBAL PARAMETERS .............................................................................9-15
S
TATICALLY SPECIFYING THE RP ........................................................................................................9-16
C
HANGING THE SHORTEST PATH TREE (SPT) THRESHOLD .................................................................9-17
CHANGING THE PIM JOIN AND PRUNE MESSAGE INTERVAL .................................................................9-17
D
ISPLAYING PIM SPARSE CONFIGURATION INFORMATION AND STATISTICS ...........................................9-18
C
ONFIGURING MULTICAST SOURCE DISCOVERY PROTOCOL (MSDP) .........................................................9-29
PEER REVERSE PATH FORWARDING (RPF) FLOODING ........................................................................9-30
S
OURCE ACTIVE CACHING ..................................................................................................................9-31
C
ONFIGURING MSDP .........................................................................................................................9-31
DISPLAYING MSDP INFORMATION .......................................................................................................9-32
C
LEARING MSDP INFORMATION .........................................................................................................9-38
DVMRP O
VERVIEW ..................................................................................................................................9-39
INITIATING DVMRP MULTICASTS ON A NETWORK ...............................................................................9-39
P
RUNING A MULTICAST TREE .............................................................................................................9-39
G
RAFTS TO A MULTICAST TREE ..........................................................................................................9-41
C
ONFIGURING DVMRP .............................................................................................................................9-42
E
NABLING DVMRP ON THE ROUTING SWITCH AND INTERFACE ............................................................9-42
M
ODIFYING DVMRP GLOBAL PARAMETERS ........................................................................................9-43
M
ODIFYING DVMRP INTERFACE PARAMETERS ...................................................................................9-47
C
ONFIGURING AN IP TUNNEL ....................................................................................................................9-50
C
ONFIGURING A STATIC MULTICAST ROUTE ..............................................................................................9-51
T
RACING A MULTICAST ROUTE ..................................................................................................................9-53
D
ISPLAYING ANOTHER MULTICAST ROUTERS MULTICAST CONFIGURATION ................................................9-55
CONFIGURING BGP4 ................................................................................ 10-1
OVERVIEW OF BGP4 ................................................................................................................................10-1
R
ELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE BGP4 ROUTE TABLE AND THE IP ROUTE TABLE ....................................10-2
H
OW BGP4 SELECTS A PATH FOR A ROUTE .......................................................................................10-3
BGP4 M
ESSAGE TYPES .....................................................................................................................10-4
B
ASIC CONFIGURATION AND ACTIVATION FOR BGP4 .................................................................................10-6
N
OTE REGARDING DISABLING BGP4 ..................................................................................................10-6
BGP4 P
ARAMETERS .................................................................................................................................10-7
W
HEN PARAMETER CHANGES TAKE EFFECT .......................................................................................10-9
M
EMORY CONSIDERATIONS .......................................................................................................................10-9
M
EMORY CONFIGURATION OPTIONS OBSOLETED BY DYNAMIC MEMORY ............................................10-10
C
ONFIGURING BGP4 ..............................................................................................................................10-10
B
ASIC CONFIGURATION TASKS ................................................................................................................10-11
E
NABLING BGP4 ON THE ROUTING SWITCH ......................................................................................10-11
C
HANGING THE ROUTER ID ..............................................................................................................10-11
S
ETTING THE LOCAL AS NUMBER .....................................................................................................10-12
A
DDING A LOOPBACK INTERFACE ......................................................................................................10-13
A
DDING BGP4 NEIGHBORS ..............................................................................................................10-14
A
DDING A BGP4 PEER GROUP ........................................................................................................10-19
O
PTIONAL CONFIGURATION TASKS ..........................................................................................................10-23
x
CHANGING THE KEEP ALIVE TIME AND HOLD TIME ............................................................................10-23
E
NABLING FAST EXTERNAL FALLOVER ..............................................................................................10-24
C
HANGING THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF PATHS FOR BGP4 LOAD SHARING .........................................10-25
S
PECIFYING A LIST OF NETWORKS TO ADVERTISE .............................................................................10-26
C
HANGING THE DEFAULT LOCAL PREFERENCE ..................................................................................10-28
ADVERTISING THE DEFAULT INFORMATION ORIGINATE .......................................................................10-29
C
HANGING THE DEFAULT MED (METRIC) USED FOR ROUTE REDISTRIBUTION ....................................10-29
C
HANGING ADMINISTRATIVE DISTANCES ...........................................................................................10-30
CONFIGURING THE ROUTING SWITCH TO ALWAYS COMPARE MULTI-EXIT DISCRIMINATORS (MEDS) ....10-31
S
YNCHRONIZING ROUTES .................................................................................................................10-32
A
UTOMATICALLY SUMMARIZING SUBNET ROUTES INTO CLASS A, B, OR C NETWORKS .......................10-32
CONFIGURING ROUTE REFLECTION PARAMETERS .............................................................................10-33
C
ONFIGURING CONFEDERATIONS ......................................................................................................10-36
A
GGREGATING ROUTES ADVERTISED TO BGP4 NEIGHBORS .............................................................10-39
MODIFYING REDISTRIBUTION PARAMETERS .......................................................................................10-41
F
ILTERING SPECIFIC IP ADDRESSES .................................................................................................10-44
F
ILTERING AS-PATHS .......................................................................................................................10-46
F
ILTERING COMMUNITIES ..................................................................................................................10-51
D
EFINING IP PREFIX LISTS ...............................................................................................................10-55
D
EFINING NEIGHBOR DISTRIBUTE LISTS ............................................................................................10-57
D
EFINING ROUTE MAPS ...................................................................................................................10-59
U
SING A TABLE MAP TO SET THE TAG VALUE ...................................................................................10-68
C
ONFIGURING ROUTE FLAP DAMPENING .................................................................................................10-69
G
LOBALLY CONFIGURING ROUTE FLAP DAMPENING ..........................................................................10-69
U
SING A ROUTE MAP TO CONFIGURE ROUTE FLAP DAMPENING FOR SPECIFIC ROUTES ....................10-71
U
SING A ROUTE MAP TO CONFIGURE ROUTE FLAP DAMPENING FOR A SPECIFIC NEIGHBOR ..............10-76
R
EMOVING ROUTE DAMPENING FROM A ROUTE ................................................................................10-78
D
ISPLAYING AND CLEARING ROUTE FLAP DAMPENING STATISTICS .....................................................10-79
S
TATICALLY ALLOCATING MEMORY FOR THE HP 6308M-SX ROUTING SWITCH ........................................10-80
C
HANGING THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF NEIGHBORS ...........................................................................10-80
C
HANGING THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF ROUTES ................................................................................10-81
C
HANGING THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF ROUTE-ATTRIBUTE ENTRIES ...................................................10-82
D
ISPLAYING BGP4 INFORMATION ............................................................................................................10-84
D
ISPLAYING SUMMARY BGP4 INFORMATION .....................................................................................10-84
D
ISPLAYING THE ACTIVE BGP4 CONFIGURATION ..............................................................................10-87
D
ISPLAYING SUMMARY NEIGHBOR INFORMATION ...............................................................................10-88
D
ISPLAYING BGP4 NEIGHBOR INFORMATION .....................................................................................10-90
D
ISPLAYING SUMMARY ROUTE INFORMATION ..................................................................................10-102
D
ISPLAYING THE BGP4 ROUTE TABLE ............................................................................................10-102
D
ISPLAYING BGP4 ROUTE-ATTRIBUTE ENTRIES ..............................................................................10-109
D
ISPLAYING THE ROUTES BGP4 HAS PLACED IN THE IP ROUTE TABLE ...........................................10-111
D
ISPLAYING ROUTE FLAP DAMPENING STATISTICS ..........................................................................10-111
D
ISPLAYING THE ACTIVE ROUTE MAP CONFIGURATION ....................................................................10-113
C
LEARING TRAFFIC COUNTERS .............................................................................................................10-113
C
LEARING ROUTE FLAP DAMPENING STATISTICS ...................................................................................10-114
U
PDATING ROUTE INFORMATION AND RESETTING A NEIGHBOR SESSION ................................................10-114
xi
Advanced Configuration and Management Guide
DYNAMICALLY REQUESTING A ROUTE REFRESH FROM A BGP4 NEIGHBOR ......................................10-114
C
LOSING OR RESETTING A NEIGHBOR SESSION ..............................................................................10-116
R
EMOVING ROUTE FLAP DAMPENING ....................................................................................................10-117
C
LEARING DIAGNOSTIC BUFFERS ..........................................................................................................10-118
NETWORK ADDRESS TRANSLATION ........................................................... 11-1
PORT ADDRESS TRANSLATION ..................................................................................................................11-3
M
AXIMUM NUMBER OF ADDRESSES ....................................................................................................11-4
PROTOCOLS SUPPORTED FOR NAT ..........................................................................................................11-4
C
ONFIGURING NAT ..................................................................................................................................11-4
C
ONFIGURING STATIC ADDRESS TRANSLATIONS ..................................................................................11-5
CONFIGURING DYNAMIC NAT PARAMETERS ........................................................................................11-5
E
NABLING NAT ..................................................................................................................................11-7
C
HANGING TRANSLATION TABLE TIMEOUTS .........................................................................................11-7
DISPLAYING THE ACTIVE NAT TRANSLATIONS ...........................................................................................11-8
D
ISPLAYING NAT STATISTICS ...................................................................................................................11-9
C
LEARING TRANSLATION TABLE ENTRIES ................................................................................................11-11
NAT D
EBUG COMMANDS ........................................................................................................................11-12
C
ONFIGURATION EXAMPLES ....................................................................................................................11-14
P
RIVATE NAT CLIENTS CONNECTED TO THE ROUTING SWITCH BY A SWITCH ......................................11-14
P
RIVATE NAT CLIENTS CONNECTED DIRECTLY TO THE ROUTING SWITCH ...........................................11-16
CONFIGURING VRRP AND VRRPE ........................................................... 12-1
OVERVIEW ................................................................................................................................................12-2
O
VERVIEW OF VRRP .........................................................................................................................12-2
O
VERVIEW OF VRRPE .......................................................................................................................12-6
C
OMPARISON OF VRRP, VRRPE, AND SRP .............................................................................................12-8
VRRP ...............................................................................................................................................12-8
VRRPE .............................................................................................................................................12-8
SRP ..................................................................................................................................................12-8
ARCHITECTURAL DIFFERENCES ...........................................................................................................12-8
VRRP
AND VRRPE PARAMETERS ............................................................................................................12-9
C
ONFIGURING BASIC VRRP PARAMETERS ..............................................................................................12-12
C
ONFIGURING THE OWNER ...............................................................................................................12-12
C
ONFIGURING A BACKUP ..................................................................................................................12-12
C
ONFIGURATION RULES FOR VRRP .................................................................................................12-12
C
ONFIGURING BASIC VRRPE PARAMETERS ............................................................................................12-13
C
ONFIGURATION RULES FOR VRRPE ...............................................................................................12-13
N
OTE REGARDING DISABLING VRRP OR VRRPE ....................................................................................12-13
C
ONFIGURING ADDITIONAL VRRP AND VRRPE PARAMETERS .................................................................12-13
F
ORCING A MASTER ROUTER TO ABDICATE TO A STANDBY ROUTER ........................................................12-18
D
ISPLAYING VRRP AND VRRPE INFORMATION .......................................................................................12-19
D
ISPLAYING SUMMARY INFORMATION ................................................................................................12-19
D
ISPLAYING DETAILED INFORMATION ................................................................................................12-21
D
ISPLAYING STATISTICS ...................................................................................................................12-26
C
LEARING VRRP OR VRRPE STATISTICS ........................................................................................12-30
xii
CONFIGURATION EXAMPLES ....................................................................................................................12-30
VRRP E
XAMPLE ..............................................................................................................................12-30
VRRPE E
XAMPLE ............................................................................................................................12-34
CONFIGURING SRP................................................................................... 13-1
OVERVIEW OF STANDBY ROUTER PROTOCOL (SRP) .................................................................................13-2
SRP S
UPPORT ON VIRTUAL INTERFACES ............................................................................................13-3
A
CTIVE AND STANDBY ROUTERS .........................................................................................................13-3
TRACK PORTS ....................................................................................................................................13-3
I
NDEPENDENT OPERATION OF RIP AND OSPF ....................................................................................13-6
D
YNAMIC SRP CONFIGURATION .........................................................................................................13-6
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN SRP AND VRRP .................................................................................................13-7
C
ONFIGURING SRP ..................................................................................................................................13-7
C
ONFIGURATION RULES FOR SRP ......................................................................................................13-8
ENABLE SRP ON THE ROUTING SWITCH .............................................................................................13-8
A
SSIGN VIRTUAL ROUTER IP ADDRESSES ...........................................................................................13-9
A
SSIGN THE TRACK PORT(S) ............................................................................................................13-10
A
SSIGNING THE ACTIVE ROUTER ......................................................................................................13-10
M
ODIFY PORT PARAMETERS (OPTIONAL) ...........................................................................................13-11
C
ONFIGURING SRP ON VIRTUAL INTERFACES ...................................................................................13-14
CONFIGURING IPX .................................................................................... 14-1
OVERVIEW OF IPX ....................................................................................................................................14-1
M
ULTIPLE IPX FRAME TYPE SUPPORT PER INTERFACE .......................................................................14-1
C
ONFIGURING IPX ....................................................................................................................................14-1
D
YNAMIC IPX CONFIGURATION ...........................................................................................................14-2
E
NABLE IPX ......................................................................................................................................14-2
E
NABLE NETBIOS .............................................................................................................................14-3
A
SSIGN IPX NETWORK NUMBER, FRAME TYPE, ENABLE NETBIOS ON AN INTERFACE ...........................14-3
D
EFINE AND ASSIGN A FORWARD FILTER AND GROUP .........................................................................14-5
D
EFINE AND ASSIGN AN IPX/RIP FILTER AND GROUP .........................................................................14-7
C
ONFIGURING IPX SAP ACCESS CONTROL LISTS (ACLS) ...................................................................14-9
E
NABLE ROUND-ROBIN GNS REPLIES ..............................................................................................14-10
F
ILTER GNS REPLIES ......................................................................................................................14-10
D
ISABLE GNS REPLIES ....................................................................................................................14-11
M
ODIFY MAXIMUM SAP AND RIP ROUTE ENTRIES ............................................................................14-11
M
ODIFY RIP AND SAP HOP COUNT INCREMENT ...............................................................................14-12
M
ODIFY THE RIP ADVERTISEMENT PACKET SIZE ...............................................................................14-13
M
ODIFY THE SAP ADVERTISEMENT PACKET SIZE ..............................................................................14-13
M
ODIFY THE RIP ADVERTISEMENT INTERVAL ....................................................................................14-14
M
ODIFY THE SAP ADVERTISEMENT INTERVAL ...................................................................................14-14
M
ODIFY THE AGE TIMER FOR LEARNED IPX ROUTES ........................................................................14-15
M
ODIFY THE AGE TIMER FOR LEARNED SAP ENTRIES ......................................................................14-15
D
ISPLAYING IPX CONFIGURATION INFORMATION AND STATISTICS .............................................................14-16
D
ISPLAYING GLOBAL IPX CONFIGURATION INFORMATION ..................................................................14-16
D
ISPLAYING IPX INTERFACE INFORMATION ........................................................................................14-17
xiii
Advanced Configuration and Management Guide
DISPLAYING THE IPX FORWARDING CACHE .......................................................................................14-19
D
ISPLAYING THE IPX ROUTE TABLE ..................................................................................................14-20
D
ISPLAYING THE IPX SERVER TABLE ................................................................................................14-21
D
ISPLAYING IPX TRAFFIC STATISTICS ...............................................................................................14-22
CONFIGURING APPLETALK........................................................................ 15-1
OVERVIEW OF APPLETALK ........................................................................................................................15-1
A
DDRESS ASSIGNMENT ......................................................................................................................15-1
NETWORK COMPONENTS ....................................................................................................................15-1
Z
ONE FILTERING ................................................................................................................................15-2
N
ETWORK FILTERING .........................................................................................................................15-3
SEED AND NON-SEED ROUTERS .........................................................................................................15-3
A
PPLETALK COMPONENTS SUPPORTED ON THE HP 9304M, HP 9308M, AND HP 6308M-SX ROUTING SWITCHES
15-3
S
ESSION LAYER SUPPORT ..................................................................................................................15-3
T
RANSPORT LAYER SUPPORT .............................................................................................................15-3
N
ETWORK LAYER SUPPORT ................................................................................................................15-4
D
ATA LINK SUPPORT ..........................................................................................................................15-4
D
YNAMIC APPLETALK ACTIVATION AND CONFIGURATION .....................................................................15-4
C
ONFIGURING APPLETALK ROUTING .........................................................................................................15-4
E
NABLE APPLETALK ...........................................................................................................................15-4
C
ONFIGURING A SEED APPLETALK ROUTER ........................................................................................15-5
C
ONFIGURING A NON-SEED APPLETALK ROUTER ................................................................................15-7
E
NABLING APPLETALK ROUTING AT THE GLOBAL (SYSTEM) LEVEL ......................................................15-7
E
NABLE APPLETALK ROUTING ON AN INTERFACE ................................................................................15-8
M
ODIFYING APPLETALK INTERFACE CONFIGURATIONS .........................................................................15-9
F
ILTERING APPLETALK ZONES AND NETWORKS .......................................................................................15-10
D
EFINING ZONE FILTERS ..................................................................................................................15-10
D
EFINE ADDITIONAL ZONE FILTERS ...................................................................................................15-12
N
ETWORK FILTERING .......................................................................................................................15-13
R
OUTING BETWEEN APPLETALK VLANS USING VIRTUAL INTERFACES ......................................................15-13
M
ODIFYING APPLETALK GLOBAL PARAMETERS ........................................................................................15-16
A
PPLETALK ARP AGE ......................................................................................................................15-17
A
PPLETALK ARP RETRANSMIT COUNT .............................................................................................15-17
A
PPLETALK ARP RETRANSMIT INTERVAL ..........................................................................................15-18
A
PPLETALK GLEAN PACKETS ...........................................................................................................15-18
A
PPLETALK QOS SOCKET ................................................................................................................15-19
A
PPLETALK RTMP UPDATE INTERVAL ..............................................................................................15-19
A
PPLETALK ZIP QUERY INTERVAL ....................................................................................................15-19
D
ISPLAYING APPLETALK INFORMATION ....................................................................................................15-20
C
LEARING APPLETALK INFORMATION .......................................................................................................15-21
CONFIGURING VLANS .............................................................................. 16-1
OVERVIEW ................................................................................................................................................16-1
T
YPES OF VLANS ..............................................................................................................................16-1
D
EFAULT VLAN .................................................................................................................................16-5
xiv
802.1P TAGGING ...............................................................................................................................16-5
S
PANNING TREE PROTOCOL (STP) ....................................................................................................16-7
V
IRTUAL INTERFACES .........................................................................................................................16-8
VLAN
AND VIRTUAL INTERFACE GROUPS ...........................................................................................16-8
D
YNAMIC, STATIC, AND EXCLUDED PORT MEMBERSHIP .......................................................................16-9
SUPER AGGREGATED VLANS ...........................................................................................................16-11
T
RUNK GROUP PORTS AND VLAN MEMBERSHIP ...............................................................................16-11
S
UMMARY OF VLAN CONFIGURATION RULES ....................................................................................16-11
ROUTING BETWEEN VLANS (ROUTING SWITCHES ONLY) .........................................................................16-12
V
IRTUAL INTERFACES (ROUTING SWITCHES ONLY) ............................................................................16-12
B
RIDGING AND ROUTING THE SAME PROTOCOL SIMULTANEOUSLY ON THE SAME DEVICE (ROUTING SWITCHES
ONLY) .......................................................................................................................................16-12
R
OUTING BETWEEN VLANS USING VIRTUAL INTERFACES (ROUTING SWITCHES ONLY) ......................16-12
A
SSIGNING A DIFFERENT VLAN ID TO THE DEFAULT VLAN ..............................................................16-13
ASSIGNING TRUNK GROUP PORTS ....................................................................................................16-13
C
ONFIGURING PORT-BASED VLANS .................................................................................................16-13
M
ODIFYING A PORT-BASED VLAN ....................................................................................................16-17
C
ONFIGURING IP SUB-NET, IPX NETWORK AND PROTOCOL-BASED VLANS .............................................16-20
R
OUTING BETWEEN VLANS USING VIRTUAL INTERFACES
(R
OUTING SWITCHES ONLY) .............................................................................................................16-21
C
ONFIGURING APPLETALK CABLE VLANS ...............................................................................................16-29
C
ONFIGURATION GUIDELINES ...........................................................................................................16-29
C
ONFIGURATION EXAMPLE ...............................................................................................................16-30
C
ONFIGURING PROTOCOL VLANS WITH DYNAMIC PORTS .......................................................................16-32
A
GING OF DYNAMIC PORTS ..............................................................................................................16-32
C
ONFIGURATION GUIDELINES ...........................................................................................................16-33
C
ONFIGURING AN IP, IPX, OR APPLETALK PROTOCOL VLAN WITH DYNAMIC PORTS ..........................16-33
C
ONFIGURING AN IP SUB-NET VLAN WITH DYNAMIC PORTS .............................................................16-33
C
ONFIGURING AN IPX NETWORK VLAN WITH DYNAMIC PORTS .........................................................16-34
C
ONFIGURING UPLINK PORTS WITHIN A PORT-BASED VLAN ...................................................................16-35
C
ONFIGURING THE SAME IP SUB-NET ADDRESS ON MULTIPLE PORT-BASED VLANS ...............................16-35
C
ONFIGURING VLAN GROUPS AND VIRTUAL INTERFACE GROUPS ............................................................16-39
C
ONFIGURING A VLAN GROUP .........................................................................................................16-39
C
ONFIGURING A VIRTUAL INTERFACE GROUP ....................................................................................16-40
D
ISPLAYING THE VLAN GROUP AND VIRTUAL INTERFACE GROUP INFORMATION ................................16-41
A
LLOCATING MEMORY FOR MORE VLANS OR VIRTUAL INTERFACES ..................................................16-41
C
ONFIGURING SUPER AGGREGATED VLANS ...........................................................................................16-43
C
ONFIGURING AGGREGATED VLANS ................................................................................................16-45
C
OMPLETE CLI EXAMPLES ...............................................................................................................16-47
C
ONFIGURING VLANS USING THE WEB MANAGEMENT INTERFACE ...........................................................16-50
C
ONFIGURING A PORT-BASED VLAN ................................................................................................16-50
C
ONFIGURING A PROTOCOL-BASED VLAN ........................................................................................16-51
C
ONFIGURING AN IP SUB-NET VLAN ...............................................................................................16-53
C
ONFIGURING AN IPX NETWORK VLAN ............................................................................................16-54
C
ONFIGURING AN APPLETALK CABLE VLAN .....................................................................................16-55
D
ISPLAYING VLAN INFORMATION ............................................................................................................16-57
xv
Advanced Configuration and Management Guide
DISPLAYING SYSTEM-WIDE VLAN INFORMATION ...............................................................................16-57
D
ISPLAYING VLAN INFORMATION FOR SPECIFIC PORTS ....................................................................16-58
ROUTE HEALTH INJECTION........................................................................ 17-1
CONFIGURATION EXAMPLE ........................................................................................................................17-1
HTTP HEALTH CHECK ALGORITHM ...........................................................................................................17-3
C
ONFIGURATION CONSIDERATIONS ............................................................................................................17-4
CLI S
YNTAX .............................................................................................................................................17-4
GLOBAL CONFIG LEVEL ....................................................................................................................17-4
R
EAL SERVER LEVEL .........................................................................................................................17-4
I
NTERFACE LEVEL ..............................................................................................................................17-5
CONFIGURING THE HTTP HEALTH CHECK ON THE ROUTING SWITCH .........................................................17-5
CLI C
OMMANDS FOR 6308M-SX R1 .................................................................................................17-5
CLI C
OMMANDS FOR 9308M R2 ........................................................................................................17-6
CLI COMMANDS FOR 6308M-SX R3 ..................................................................................................17-7
D
ISPLAYING SERVER AND APPLICATION PORT INFORMATION ......................................................................17-7
D
ISPLAYING SERVER INFORMATION .....................................................................................................17-7
D
ISPLAYING KEEPALIVE INFORMATION .................................................................................................17-8
NETWORK MONITORING ..............................................................................A-1
RMON SUPPORT ...................................................................................................................................... A-1
S
TATISTICS (RMON GROUP 1) ............................................................................................................ A-1
H
ISTORY (RMON GROUP 2) ............................................................................................................... A-2
A
LARM (RMON GROUP 3) .................................................................................................................. A-2
E
VENT (RMON GROUP 9) ................................................................................................................... A-3
V
IEWING SYSTEM INFORMATION ................................................................................................................. A-3
V
IEWING CONFIGURATION INFORMATION ..................................................................................................... A-3
V
IEWING PORT STATISTICS ........................................................................................................................ A-4
V
IEWING STP STATISTICS .......................................................................................................................... A-4
C
LEARING STATISTICS ...............................................................................................................................A-5
PROTECTING AGAINST DENIAL OF SERVICE ATTACKS..................................B-1
PROTECTING AGAINST SMURF ATTACKS ..................................................................................................... B-1
A
VOIDING BEING AN INTERMEDIARY IN A SMURF ATTACK ...................................................................... B-2
A
VOIDING BEING A VICTIM IN A SMURF ATTACK .................................................................................... B-2
P
ROTECTING AGAINST TCP SYN ATTACKS ................................................................................................ B-3
D
ISPLAYING STATISTICS ABOUT PACKETS DROPPED BECAUSE OF DOS ATTACKS ........................................ B-4
POLICIES AND FILTERS ...............................................................................C-1
SCOPE ...................................................................................................................................................... C-2
D
EFAULT FILTER ACTIONS ......................................................................................................................... C-3
P
OLICY AND FILTER PRECEDENCE .............................................................................................................. C-4
Q
OS ................................................................................................................................................... C-4
P
RECEDENCE AMONG FILTERS ON DIFFERENT LAYERS ........................................................................ C-4
P
RECEDENCE AMONG FILTERS ON THE SAME LAYER ........................................................................... C-4
P
OLICIES ................................................................................................................................................... C-5
xvi
QUALITY-OF-SERVICE POLICIES ........................................................................................................... C-5
L
AYER 3 POLICIES ...............................................................................................................................C-6
L
AYER 4 POLICIES ...............................................................................................................................C-9
F
ILTERS .................................................................................................................................................. C-11
L
AYER 2 FILTERS .............................................................................................................................. C-12
LAYER 3 FILTERS .............................................................................................................................. C-16
L
AYER 4 FILTERS .............................................................................................................................. C-28
INDEX .......................................................................................................... I-1
xvii
Advanced Configuration and Management Guide
xviii
Chapter 1
Getting Started
Introduction
This guide describes how to install, configure, and monitor the following devices:
HP ProCurve Routing Switch 9308M
HP ProCurve Routing Switch 9304M
HP ProCurve Routing Switch 6308M-SX
HP ProCurve Switch 6208M-SX
This guide also describes how to monitor these products using statistics and summary screens.
Audience
This guide assumes that you have a working knowledge of Layer 2 and Layer 3 switching and routing. You also
should be familiar with the following protocols if applicable to your networkIP, RIP, OSPF, BGP4, IGMP, PIM,
DVMRP, IPX, AppleTalk, SRP, and VRRP.
Nomenclature
This guide uses the following typographical conventions:
Italic highlights the title of another publication and occasionally emphasizes a word or phrase.
Bold highlights a CLI command.
Bold Italic highlights a term that is being defined.
Underline
highlights a link on the Web management interface.
Capitals highlights field names and buttons that appear in the Web management interface.
NOTE: A note emphasizes an important fact or calls your attention to a dependency.
WARNING: A warning calls your attention to a possible hazard that can cause injury or death.
CAUTION: A caution calls your attention to a possible hazard that can damage equipment.
1 - 1
  • Page 1 1
  • Page 2 2
  • Page 3 3
  • Page 4 4
  • Page 5 5
  • Page 6 6
  • Page 7 7
  • Page 8 8
  • Page 9 9
  • Page 10 10
  • Page 11 11
  • Page 12 12
  • Page 13 13
  • Page 14 14
  • Page 15 15
  • Page 16 16
  • Page 17 17
  • Page 18 18
  • Page 19 19
  • Page 20 20
  • Page 21 21
  • Page 22 22
  • Page 23 23
  • Page 24 24
  • Page 25 25
  • Page 26 26
  • Page 27 27
  • Page 28 28
  • Page 29 29
  • Page 30 30
  • Page 31 31
  • Page 32 32
  • Page 33 33
  • Page 34 34
  • Page 35 35
  • Page 36 36
  • Page 37 37
  • Page 38 38
  • Page 39 39
  • Page 40 40
  • Page 41 41
  • Page 42 42
  • Page 43 43
  • Page 44 44
  • Page 45 45
  • Page 46 46
  • Page 47 47
  • Page 48 48
  • Page 49 49
  • Page 50 50
  • Page 51 51
  • Page 52 52
  • Page 53 53
  • Page 54 54
  • Page 55 55
  • Page 56 56
  • Page 57 57
  • Page 58 58
  • Page 59 59
  • Page 60 60
  • Page 61 61
  • Page 62 62
  • Page 63 63
  • Page 64 64
  • Page 65 65
  • Page 66 66
  • Page 67 67
  • Page 68 68
  • Page 69 69
  • Page 70 70
  • Page 71 71
  • Page 72 72
  • Page 73 73
  • Page 74 74
  • Page 75 75
  • Page 76 76
  • Page 77 77
  • Page 78 78
  • Page 79 79
  • Page 80 80
  • Page 81 81
  • Page 82 82
  • Page 83 83
  • Page 84 84
  • Page 85 85
  • Page 86 86
  • Page 87 87
  • Page 88 88
  • Page 89 89
  • Page 90 90
  • Page 91 91
  • Page 92 92
  • Page 93 93
  • Page 94 94
  • Page 95 95
  • Page 96 96
  • Page 97 97
  • Page 98 98
  • Page 99 99
  • Page 100 100
  • Page 101 101
  • Page 102 102
  • Page 103 103
  • Page 104 104
  • Page 105 105
  • Page 106 106
  • Page 107 107
  • Page 108 108
  • Page 109 109
  • Page 110 110
  • Page 111 111
  • Page 112 112
  • Page 113 113
  • Page 114 114
  • Page 115 115
  • Page 116 116
  • Page 117 117
  • Page 118 118
  • Page 119 119
  • Page 120 120
  • Page 121 121
  • Page 122 122
  • Page 123 123
  • Page 124 124
  • Page 125 125
  • Page 126 126
  • Page 127 127
  • Page 128 128
  • Page 129 129
  • Page 130 130
  • Page 131 131
  • Page 132 132
  • Page 133 133
  • Page 134 134
  • Page 135 135
  • Page 136 136
  • Page 137 137
  • Page 138 138
  • Page 139 139
  • Page 140 140
  • Page 141 141
  • Page 142 142
  • Page 143 143
  • Page 144 144
  • Page 145 145
  • Page 146 146
  • Page 147 147
  • Page 148 148
  • Page 149 149
  • Page 150 150
  • Page 151 151
  • Page 152 152
  • Page 153 153
  • Page 154 154
  • Page 155 155
  • Page 156 156
  • Page 157 157
  • Page 158 158
  • Page 159 159
  • Page 160 160
  • Page 161 161
  • Page 162 162
  • Page 163 163
  • Page 164 164
  • Page 165 165
  • Page 166 166
  • Page 167 167
  • Page 168 168
  • Page 169 169
  • Page 170 170
  • Page 171 171
  • Page 172 172
  • Page 173 173
  • Page 174 174
  • Page 175 175
  • Page 176 176
  • Page 177 177
  • Page 178 178
  • Page 179 179
  • Page 180 180
  • Page 181 181
  • Page 182 182
  • Page 183 183
  • Page 184 184
  • Page 185 185
  • Page 186 186
  • Page 187 187
  • Page 188 188
  • Page 189 189
  • Page 190 190
  • Page 191 191
  • Page 192 192
  • Page 193 193
  • Page 194 194
  • Page 195 195
  • Page 196 196
  • Page 197 197
  • Page 198 198
  • Page 199 199
  • Page 200 200
  • Page 201 201
  • Page 202 202
  • Page 203 203
  • Page 204 204
  • Page 205 205
  • Page 206 206
  • Page 207 207
  • Page 208 208
  • Page 209 209
  • Page 210 210
  • Page 211 211
  • Page 212 212
  • Page 213 213
  • Page 214 214
  • Page 215 215
  • Page 216 216
  • Page 217 217
  • Page 218 218
  • Page 219 219
  • Page 220 220
  • Page 221 221
  • Page 222 222
  • Page 223 223
  • Page 224 224
  • Page 225 225
  • Page 226 226
  • Page 227 227
  • Page 228 228
  • Page 229 229
  • Page 230 230
  • Page 231 231
  • Page 232 232
  • Page 233 233
  • Page 234 234
  • Page 235 235
  • Page 236 236
  • Page 237 237
  • Page 238 238
  • Page 239 239
  • Page 240 240
  • Page 241 241
  • Page 242 242
  • Page 243 243
  • Page 244 244
  • Page 245 245
  • Page 246 246
  • Page 247 247
  • Page 248 248
  • Page 249 249
  • Page 250 250
  • Page 251 251
  • Page 252 252
  • Page 253 253
  • Page 254 254
  • Page 255 255
  • Page 256 256
  • Page 257 257
  • Page 258 258
  • Page 259 259
  • Page 260 260
  • Page 261 261
  • Page 262 262
  • Page 263 263
  • Page 264 264
  • Page 265 265
  • Page 266 266
  • Page 267 267
  • Page 268 268
  • Page 269 269
  • Page 270 270
  • Page 271 271
  • Page 272 272
  • Page 273 273
  • Page 274 274
  • Page 275 275
  • Page 276 276
  • Page 277 277
  • Page 278 278
  • Page 279 279
  • Page 280 280
  • Page 281 281
  • Page 282 282
  • Page 283 283
  • Page 284 284
  • Page 285 285
  • Page 286 286
  • Page 287 287
  • Page 288 288
  • Page 289 289
  • Page 290 290
  • Page 291 291
  • Page 292 292
  • Page 293 293
  • Page 294 294
  • Page 295 295
  • Page 296 296
  • Page 297 297
  • Page 298 298
  • Page 299 299
  • Page 300 300
  • Page 301 301
  • Page 302 302
  • Page 303 303
  • Page 304 304
  • Page 305 305
  • Page 306 306
  • Page 307 307
  • Page 308 308
  • Page 309 309
  • Page 310 310
  • Page 311 311
  • Page 312 312
  • Page 313 313
  • Page 314 314
  • Page 315 315
  • Page 316 316
  • Page 317 317
  • Page 318 318
  • Page 319 319
  • Page 320 320
  • Page 321 321
  • Page 322 322
  • Page 323 323
  • Page 324 324
  • Page 325 325
  • Page 326 326
  • Page 327 327
  • Page 328 328
  • Page 329 329
  • Page 330 330
  • Page 331 331
  • Page 332 332
  • Page 333 333
  • Page 334 334
  • Page 335 335
  • Page 336 336
  • Page 337 337
  • Page 338 338
  • Page 339 339
  • Page 340 340
  • Page 341 341
  • Page 342 342
  • Page 343 343
  • Page 344 344
  • Page 345 345
  • Page 346 346
  • Page 347 347
  • Page 348 348
  • Page 349 349
  • Page 350 350
  • Page 351 351
  • Page 352 352
  • Page 353 353
  • Page 354 354
  • Page 355 355
  • Page 356 356
  • Page 357 357
  • Page 358 358
  • Page 359 359
  • Page 360 360
  • Page 361 361
  • Page 362 362
  • Page 363 363
  • Page 364 364
  • Page 365 365
  • Page 366 366
  • Page 367 367
  • Page 368 368
  • Page 369 369
  • Page 370 370
  • Page 371 371
  • Page 372 372
  • Page 373 373
  • Page 374 374
  • Page 375 375
  • Page 376 376
  • Page 377 377
  • Page 378 378
  • Page 379 379
  • Page 380 380
  • Page 381 381
  • Page 382 382
  • Page 383 383
  • Page 384 384
  • Page 385 385
  • Page 386 386
  • Page 387 387
  • Page 388 388
  • Page 389 389
  • Page 390 390
  • Page 391 391
  • Page 392 392
  • Page 393 393
  • Page 394 394
  • Page 395 395
  • Page 396 396
  • Page 397 397
  • Page 398 398
  • Page 399 399
  • Page 400 400
  • Page 401 401
  • Page 402 402
  • Page 403 403
  • Page 404 404
  • Page 405 405
  • Page 406 406
  • Page 407 407
  • Page 408 408
  • Page 409 409
  • Page 410 410
  • Page 411 411
  • Page 412 412
  • Page 413 413
  • Page 414 414
  • Page 415 415
  • Page 416 416
  • Page 417 417
  • Page 418 418
  • Page 419 419
  • Page 420 420
  • Page 421 421
  • Page 422 422
  • Page 423 423
  • Page 424 424
  • Page 425 425
  • Page 426 426
  • Page 427 427
  • Page 428 428
  • Page 429 429
  • Page 430 430
  • Page 431 431
  • Page 432 432
  • Page 433 433
  • Page 434 434
  • Page 435 435
  • Page 436 436
  • Page 437 437
  • Page 438 438
  • Page 439 439
  • Page 440 440
  • Page 441 441
  • Page 442 442
  • Page 443 443
  • Page 444 444
  • Page 445 445
  • Page 446 446
  • Page 447 447
  • Page 448 448
  • Page 449 449
  • Page 450 450
  • Page 451 451
  • Page 452 452
  • Page 453 453
  • Page 454 454
  • Page 455 455
  • Page 456 456
  • Page 457 457
  • Page 458 458
  • Page 459 459
  • Page 460 460
  • Page 461 461
  • Page 462 462
  • Page 463 463
  • Page 464 464
  • Page 465 465
  • Page 466 466
  • Page 467 467
  • Page 468 468
  • Page 469 469
  • Page 470 470
  • Page 471 471
  • Page 472 472
  • Page 473 473
  • Page 474 474
  • Page 475 475
  • Page 476 476
  • Page 477 477
  • Page 478 478
  • Page 479 479
  • Page 480 480
  • Page 481 481
  • Page 482 482
  • Page 483 483
  • Page 484 484
  • Page 485 485
  • Page 486 486
  • Page 487 487
  • Page 488 488
  • Page 489 489
  • Page 490 490
  • Page 491 491
  • Page 492 492
  • Page 493 493
  • Page 494 494
  • Page 495 495
  • Page 496 496
  • Page 497 497
  • Page 498 498
  • Page 499 499
  • Page 500 500
  • Page 501 501
  • Page 502 502
  • Page 503 503
  • Page 504 504
  • Page 505 505
  • Page 506 506
  • Page 507 507
  • Page 508 508
  • Page 509 509
  • Page 510 510
  • Page 511 511
  • Page 512 512
  • Page 513 513
  • Page 514 514
  • Page 515 515
  • Page 516 516
  • Page 517 517
  • Page 518 518
  • Page 519 519
  • Page 520 520
  • Page 521 521
  • Page 522 522
  • Page 523 523
  • Page 524 524
  • Page 525 525
  • Page 526 526
  • Page 527 527
  • Page 528 528
  • Page 529 529
  • Page 530 530
  • Page 531 531
  • Page 532 532
  • Page 533 533
  • Page 534 534
  • Page 535 535
  • Page 536 536
  • Page 537 537
  • Page 538 538
  • Page 539 539
  • Page 540 540
  • Page 541 541
  • Page 542 542
  • Page 543 543
  • Page 544 544
  • Page 545 545
  • Page 546 546
  • Page 547 547
  • Page 548 548
  • Page 549 549
  • Page 550 550
  • Page 551 551
  • Page 552 552
  • Page 553 553
  • Page 554 554
  • Page 555 555
  • Page 556 556
  • Page 557 557
  • Page 558 558
  • Page 559 559
  • Page 560 560
  • Page 561 561
  • Page 562 562
  • Page 563 563
  • Page 564 564
  • Page 565 565
  • Page 566 566
  • Page 567 567
  • Page 568 568
  • Page 569 569
  • Page 570 570
  • Page 571 571
  • Page 572 572
  • Page 573 573
  • Page 574 574
  • Page 575 575
  • Page 576 576
  • Page 577 577
  • Page 578 578
  • Page 579 579
  • Page 580 580
  • Page 581 581
  • Page 582 582
  • Page 583 583
  • Page 584 584
  • Page 585 585
  • Page 586 586
  • Page 587 587
  • Page 588 588
  • Page 589 589
  • Page 590 590
  • Page 591 591
  • Page 592 592
  • Page 593 593
  • Page 594 594
  • Page 595 595
  • Page 596 596
  • Page 597 597
  • Page 598 598
  • Page 599 599
  • Page 600 600
  • Page 601 601
  • Page 602 602
  • Page 603 603
  • Page 604 604
  • Page 605 605
  • Page 606 606
  • Page 607 607
  • Page 608 608
  • Page 609 609
  • Page 610 610
  • Page 611 611
  • Page 612 612
  • Page 613 613
  • Page 614 614
  • Page 615 615
  • Page 616 616
  • Page 617 617
  • Page 618 618
  • Page 619 619
  • Page 620 620
  • Page 621 621
  • Page 622 622
  • Page 623 623
  • Page 624 624
  • Page 625 625
  • Page 626 626
  • Page 627 627
  • Page 628 628
  • Page 629 629
  • Page 630 630
  • Page 631 631
  • Page 632 632
  • Page 633 633
  • Page 634 634
  • Page 635 635
  • Page 636 636
  • Page 637 637
  • Page 638 638
  • Page 639 639
  • Page 640 640
  • Page 641 641
  • Page 642 642
  • Page 643 643
  • Page 644 644
  • Page 645 645
  • Page 646 646
  • Page 647 647
  • Page 648 648
  • Page 649 649
  • Page 650 650
  • Page 651 651
  • Page 652 652
  • Page 653 653
  • Page 654 654
  • Page 655 655
  • Page 656 656
  • Page 657 657
  • Page 658 658
  • Page 659 659
  • Page 660 660
  • Page 661 661
  • Page 662 662
  • Page 663 663
  • Page 664 664
  • Page 665 665
  • Page 666 666
  • Page 667 667
  • Page 668 668
  • Page 669 669
  • Page 670 670
  • Page 671 671
  • Page 672 672
  • Page 673 673
  • Page 674 674
  • Page 675 675
  • Page 676 676
  • Page 677 677
  • Page 678 678
  • Page 679 679
  • Page 680 680
  • Page 681 681
  • Page 682 682
  • Page 683 683
  • Page 684 684
  • Page 685 685
  • Page 686 686
  • Page 687 687
  • Page 688 688
  • Page 689 689
  • Page 690 690
  • Page 691 691
  • Page 692 692
  • Page 693 693
  • Page 694 694
  • Page 695 695
  • Page 696 696
  • Page 697 697
  • Page 698 698
  • Page 699 699
  • Page 700 700
  • Page 701 701
  • Page 702 702
  • Page 703 703
  • Page 704 704
  • Page 705 705
  • Page 706 706
  • Page 707 707
  • Page 708 708
  • Page 709 709
  • Page 710 710

HP 9304M User manual

Category
Software
Type
User manual
This manual is also suitable for

Ask a question and I''ll find the answer in the document

Finding information in a document is now easier with AI