3com 4007 Release note

Category
Software
Type
Release note
http://www.3com.com/
Switch 4007
Release Notes
Management Module, Release 3.0.5
Layer 2 Switch Fabric Modules, Release 3.0.5
Layer 2 Switching Modules, Release 3.0.5
Multilayer Switching Modules, Releases 3.0.5
Part No. 10013820
Published August 2000
3Com Corporation
5400 Bayfront Plaza
Santa Clara, California
95052-8145
Copyright © 2000, 3Com Corporation. All rights reserved. No part of this documentation may be reproduced
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please contact 3Com and a copy will be provided to you.
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If you are a United States government agency, then this documentation and the software described herein are
provided to you subject to the following:
All technical data and computer software are commercial in nature and developed solely at private expense.
Software is delivered as “Commercial Computer Software” as defined in DFARS 252.227-7014 (June 1995) or
as a “commercial item” as defined in FAR 2.101(a) and as such is provided with only such rights as are
provided in 3Com’s standard commercial license for the Software. Technical data is provided with limited rights
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You agree not to remove or deface any portion of any legend provided on any licensed program or
documentation contained in, or delivered to you in conjunction with, these Release Notes.
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associated.
C
ONTENTS
1
O
VERVIEW
Scope 11
Important Notices 12
System Requirements 14
2
R
ELEASE
H
IGHLIGHTS
Accelerated Address Aging 16
Purpose 16
How It Works 16
Recommendations 17
Interaction with Transcend Enterprise VLAN Manager 17
Advanced Autonegotiation 18
Sample Problem Description 18
How Advanced Autonegotiation Works 18
Configuration Options 19
Configuring Standard Autonegotiation 19
Configuring a Fixed Port State 19
Configuring Advanced Autonegotiation or Port Monitoring 19
Sample Configurations and System Behavior 20
Configuration A 20
Configuration B 20
Configuration C 21
Configuration D 21
Configuration E 21
Information Display 22
Important Considerations 22
LX 70 GBIC Transceiver 23
Trap Filtering 24
Available Trap Filters 24
Managing Traps 24
3
R
ELEASE
I
SSUES
F
OR
M
ANAGEMENT
M
ODULES
Corrected Problems in Release 3.0.0 28
Operating Considerations for Release 3.0.5 29
Diagnostic events 29
Chassis Reset 29
Software Transfers 29
Password Access 30
System and Module Naming 30
Web Management 30
Known Problems in Release 3.0.5 30
Diagnostics 30
SLIP Interfaces 31
System Time 31
Software Downloads 31
4
R
ELEASE
I
SSUES
F
OR
S
WITCH
F
ABRIC
M
ODULES
Corrected Problems in Release 3.0.0 34
System 34
Ethernet 34
Bridging 34
VLAN 34
Corrected Problems in Release 3.0.5 35
Bridging 35
Management 35
Problems Fixed in v3.0.5 Address Table 36
Problem Overview 36
Problem Detail 36
Work Around 37
Recommendations 37
Guidelines from FR003 TRANSCEND UNIX 5.0 UPDATE 37
Important Notes 39
Operating Considerations for Release 3.0.5 41
Staging 41
System 41
Management 41
Web-based Management 41
Ethernet 42
Transmit and Receive Ports on GBIC Modules 42
Bridging 42
Trunking 42
Resilient Links 43
VLANs 43
Known Problems for Release 3.0.5 44
System 44
Management 44
Ethernet 45
Trunking 45
VLANs 46
5
R
ELEASE
I
SSUES
FOR
L
AYER
2 S
WITCHING
M
ODULES
Corrected Problems in Release 3.0.0 48
System 48
Management 48
Ethernet 48
Bridging 48
VLANs 49
Corrected Problems in Release 3.0.5 49
Bridging 49
Management 50
NVRAM 51
Problems Fixed in v3.0.5 Address Table 51
Problem Overview 51
Problem Detail 52
Work Around 52
Recommendations 53
Guidelines from FR003 TRANSCEND UNIX 5.0 UPDATE 53
Important Notes 54
Operating Considerations for Release 3.0.5 57
System 57
Web-based Management 57
SNMP 57
57
Ethernet 57
Bridging 58
Trunking 59
VLANs 59
Known Problems in Release 3.0.5 60
System 60
Management 60
Ethernet 61
Bridging 61
Trunking 62
6
R
ELEASE
I
SSUES
FOR
M
ULTILAYER
S
WITCHING
M
ODULES
Corrected Problems in Release 3.0.0 66
System 66
Bridging 66
Virtual LANs (VLANs) 66
IP 66
QoS 66
Roving Analysis 66
Web Console 66
Ethernet 66
4-port Gigabit Ethernet Layer 3 Switching Module (GBIC) 67
Corrected Problems in Release 3.0.5 67
QoS 67
RMON 67
RMON-2 Network Management Applications 67
IP Policies 67
OSPF 68
VRRP 68
Problems Fixed in v3.0.5 Address Table 68
Problem Overview 68
Problem Detail 69
Work Around 69
Recommendations 70
Guidelines from FR003 TRANSCEND UNIX 5.0 UPDATE 70
Important Notes 71
Operating Considerations in Release 3.0.5 74
System 74
SNMP 74
RMON 75
Ethernet 75
Bridging 75
Backplane Port Trunking 76
Trunking 76
Packet Filtering 77
Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) 77
IP 77
IP Multicast 77
AppleTalk 77
QoS 78
Roving Analysis 79
Filter Builder 79
Transmit and Receive Ports on GBIC Modules 79
Web-based Management 79
VLANs 79
4-port GBIC Multilayer Switching Module (3CB9RG4) 80
Known Problems in Release 3.0.5 80
System 80
SNMP 80
Ethernet 81
Bridging 81
Trunking 82
VLANs 83
Internet Protocol (IP) 83
OSPF 83
Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) 84
IP Multicast 84
IPX 84
QoS 84
RSVP 85
RMON 85
Web-based Management 86
4-port GBIC Multilayer Switching Module (Model
Number 3CB9RG4) 86
7
D
OCUMENTATION
C
HANGES
Ter mino logy 8 8
Ethernet 88
Internet Packet Exchange (IPX) 88
Important Considerations 89
Quality of Service (QoS) 90
Web-based Management 90
Resetting Modules 91
SNMP Traps 92
EME Command Changes in Release 3.0.5 92
Old command structure in software release 3.0.0: 92
New command structure in software release 3.0.5: 92
Examples 93
Setting SNMP Trap Destinations 94
8
S
OFTWARE
I
NSTALLATION
Verifying Module Software Releases and Compatibility 96
Verifying Software Releases on an Existing System 96
Verifying Software Releases on a New System and Modules 98
How to Obtain the Latest Software 100
Where to Place the Software 100
Terminology for the EME Module 101
Clarifying Acronym Use 101
Terms for Redundant EME Modules 101
Prerequisites for Software Installation 102
Upgrading the EME Module to Release 3.0.5 104
Upgrading a Single EME Module 105
Upgrading Two EME Modules 106
Installing EMC Boot Software 108
Installing EMC Operational Software 108
Installing EME Boot Software 109
Installing EME Operational Software 109
Upgrading Layer 2 Switching Modules to Release 3.0.5 110
Upgrading Multilayer Switching Modules From 2.1 to 3.0.5 111
Upgrading Multilayer Switching Modules From 3.0 or 3.0.1 to 3.0.5 114
Transition Issues from Release 2.1 to 3.0 114
Upgrade Procedure 116
Updating Emergency Download Parameters 117
Downgrading Modules From 3.0.5 to 3.0.0 or 3.0.1 119
9
R
EFERENCE
MIB Files 121
Entering Commands 122
Year 2000 Compliance 122
10
T
ECHNICAL
S
UPPORT
Online Technical Services 123
World Wide Web Site 123
3Com Knowledgebase Web Services 123
3Com FTP Site 124
3Com Bulletin Board Service 124
Access by Analog Modem 124
Access by Digital Modem 125
3Com Facts Automated Fax Service 125
Support from Your Network Supplier 125
Support from 3Com 125
Returning Products for Repair 127
1
O
VERVIEW
Scope
These release notes summarize operational requirements and issues for
the following Switch 4007 modules and software releases:
Table 1
Software Release Numbers Addressed in These Release Notes
Description Model Number Software Release Filenames
Management Module (EME) 3CB9EME Management software —
Boot code 3.0.0
Operational code 3.0.5
Controller software —
Boot code 2.1.0
Operational code 3.0.0
eme30000.bt
eme30005.op
emcv20100.bt
emc30000.op
9-port Gigabit Ethernet Layer 2
Switching Fabric
3CB9FG9 3.0.5 fg930005.all
24-port Gigabit Ethernet Layer 2
Switching Fabric
3CB9FG24T 3.0.5 fga24t30005.all
4-port Gigabit Ethernet Interface
Module
3CB9LG4 3.0.5 Not applicable; module
passes traffic directly to
switch fabric.
20-port 100BASE-FX Layer 2
Switching Module
3CB9LF20MM 3.0.5 lf20mm3005.all
36-port 10/100BASE-TX Layer 2
Switching Module
3CB9LF36R
3.0.5 lf36r30005.all
9-port Gigabit Ethernet Layer 2
Switching Module
3CB9LG9MC 3.0.5 lg9mc30005.all
12-port 10/100BASE-TX
Multilayer Switching Module
3CB9RF12R 3.0.5 rf12r30005.all
10-port 100BASE-FX
Multilayer Switching Module
3CB9RF10MC 3.0.5 rf10mc30005.all
4-port Gigabit Ethernet
Multilayer Switching Module
3CB9RG4 3.0.5 rg430005.all
12
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HAPTER
1: O
VERVIEW
Important Notices
Read these important notices before you begin.
The Switch 4007 management interfaces refer to the Switch 4007
Management Module as the Enterprise Management Engine (EME). In
these release notes, the Switch 4007 Management Module is referred to
as the EME for brevity.
The term
Administration Console
refers to the menu-driven, command
line interface on switching modules; each switching module has its own
Administration Console. The terms
EME prompt
,
EME console
, or
system
prompt
refer to the command line interface that you first encounter
when you connect to the system. It is from this interface that you connect
to a switching module’s Administration Console, modify system settings
such as power and temperature, modify settings on the EME module, or
arrange software downloads.
The 10-port 100BASE-FX Multilayer Switching Module (3CB9RF10MC)
that is listed in Table 1 is new to the Switch 4007 product line at this
release.
Although the heritage of the Switch 4007 product line is the
CoreBuilder 9000 product line, these Switch 4007 release notes do not
cover all aspects that apply to the CoreBuilder 9000. These release notes
include only information about the subset of modules that are officially
supported under the Switch 4007 brand and about configurations that
apply to the Switch 4007 (for example, issues that deal with dual switch
fabrics are not included because the Switch 4007 chassis only has one
fabric slot). For a list of modules that are officially supported in a
Switch 4007 system, see Table 1. If you have a CoreBuilder 9000 system
or if you are operating unsupported modules in a Switch 4007 system,
we recommend that you download from the 3Com Web site the suite of
CoreBuilder 9000 Release Notes for Software Release 3.0.5.
To obtain later software maintenance releases or upgrades and
associated release notes for the Switch 4007, visit the 3Com Web site:
http://support.3com.com/
For comprehensive, up-to-date information about the Switch 4007 and
other 3Com products, see the online user guides on the 3Com Web site:
http://support.3com.com/nav/switches.htm
Important Notices
13
The Switch 4007 software and management interfaces are built from
CoreBuilder
®
9000 switch technology. In Switch 4007 software, the
interface prompts and displays indicate this heritage. The examples,
tables, and figures in the Switch 4007 documentation may also indicate
this heritage.
CAUTION:
Except for the EME which operates four different files on
mixed release numbers (see Table 1), all modules in the Switch 4007
chassis must run software release 3.0.5 for functional reasons. The
software for CoreBuilder 9000 modules and Switch 4007 modules is
identical. Upgrade the EME first, followed by the switching modules. For
software download and installation instructions, see the chapter
“Software Installation” later in these release notes.
CAUTION:
The Switch 4007 Setup Wizard, supplied on the Software
CD-ROM, is designed to simplify installation of the switch. Release 1.0 of
the Setup Wizard enables you to enter an invalid IP address or subnet
mask, which prevents Telnet access to the EME management module.
3Com recommends that you do not use the Setup Wizard until an
updated version is available from the 3Com Web site.
CAUTION:
To run the Transcend® Network Supervisor application (for
managing and monitoring Switch 4007 activity), the Microsoft® Virtual
Machine and Microsoft WinSock2 applications may be required on your
PC. During installation, Transcend Network Supervisor will check your
PC's configuration and prompt you if these files are needed. If required,
you should exit from the Transcend Network Supervisor installation utility
and proceed to download (from the Microsoft web site) and install each
of these applications separately. After they are installed, you can restart
the installation utility for Transcend Network Supervisor.
CAUTION:
This release requires that the EME have 20 MB of CPU RAM.
To determine the current CPU RAM size, enter
show eme
from the EME
command line interface. The
CPU Ram Size (MB)
field on the left side of
the screen indicates the amount of CPU RAM:
8
or
20
. If your EME has
8 MB of CPU RAM, you must replace one of the two 4 MB DRAM cards
with a 16 MB DRAM card (order number 3CB9EE). After you install it, you
will have the required 20 MB of CPU RAM. To order a 16 MB DRAM card,
contact your network supplier or 3Com representative.
14
C
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1: O
VERVIEW
CAUTION:
Before you attempt to download any module software, save
the configuration file for the modules that you are upgrading to an
external device using the
upload
command from the EME prompt. Name
the files so that they uniquely identify the versions of the module code
that were in use at the time they were uploaded, as well as the chassis
and slot where the module is located. See the
Switch 4007
Implementation Guide
for an explanation about how to use this
command. You must save the configuration files because they are not
guaranteed to work with revisions of code other than the ones with
which they were created. If at some point you want to downgrade the
modules to preexisting code, you must use the configuration file that
corresponds to that version of code.
System
Requirements
Each Switch 4007 chassis has these minimum system requirements:
One power supply.
To increase device and network availability, you can optionally install a
second power supply.
One fan assembly.
One switch fabric module with software that is compatible with other
modules in the chassis.
Depending on the other modules that are installed in the chassis and
their associated throughput requirements, choose either the 24-port
Gigabit Ethernet Switch Fabric Module (Model Number 3CB9FG24T)
or the 9-port Gigabit Ethernet Switch Fabric Module (Model
Number 3CB9FG9).
One Management Module (Model Number 3CB9EME) with 20 MB of
CPU RAM and software that is compatible with other modules in the
chassis.
To increase device availability and network availability, you can
optionally install a second Management Module (EME).
An appropriate number of Interface Modules, Layer 2 Switching
Modules, or Multilayer Switching Modules with software that is
compatible with other modules in the chassis.
2
R
ELEASE
H
IGHLIGHTS
Software Release 3.0.5 is a maintenance release, however it also includes
a few new features. The applicability of new features to the Switch 4007
module types is outlined in Table 2.
The remaining sections in this chapter provide descriptions of the
features.
Table 2
New Features on Switch 4007 Modules
Layer 2
Switching
Modules
Layer 2
Switch Fabric
Modules
Multilayer
Switching
Modules
Management
Modules
(EME)
Accelerated
Address Aging
YES YES NO NO
Advanced
Autonegotiation
YES NO YES NO
Support for LX 70
GBIC Transceiver
YES YES YES NO
Trap Filtering NO NO NO YES
16
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IGHLIGHTS
Accelerated
Address Aging
For all Layer 2 Switching Modules in Release 3.0.5, a third option has
been added to the
bridge spanningTree stpState
menu called
agingOnly
(other options are
enable
and
disable
).
Purpose
If you select the
agingOnly
option, the Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) is
disabled on the module but the address table’s aging interval will change
(becomes shorter) whenever the module detects that one of its links has
gone down. The objective is to flush addresses as quickly as possible.
Although STP is not operating on the module, this temporary, alternate
aging process draws upon a couple of the STP parameter values. These
can be system defaults or customized values.
How It Works
Under normal operating conditions, the Layer 2 module uses the aging
interval value that you set in the
bridge agingTime
command. However,
with the
agingOnly
option selected, whenever a module detects that one
of its links has gone down, the aging interval temporarily changes to the
value that you set in the
bridge spanningTree stpForwardDelay
option. Usually, this interval is much shorter than the
bridge agingTime
and thus addresses age more quickly. After a period of time equal to
bridge spanningTree stpForwardDelay
+
bridge spanningTree
stpMaxAge
seconds has transpired, a module then reverts to using the
value in
bridge agingTime
as the aging interval.
Essentially, the
agingOnly
option mimics the action that STP takes when
ports go down, but does so without having STP enabled on the module.
The accelerated aging process affects all addresses in the Layer 2
module’s address table; it is not limited to the addresses that are
associated with the down port.
This feature was not implemented on Layer 3 modules because it was not
needed. Whether STP is enabled or disabled, whenever a port has gone
down or is disabled, Layer 3 modules immediately flush all addresses that
are associated with that specific port.
Accelerated Address Aging
17
Recommendations
If you select the
agingOnly
option, 3Com recommends that you also set
the
stpForwardDelay
value to the lowest number in the allowed range.
This will ensure that addresses flush as quickly as possible.
If you are using Transcend Enterprise VLAN Manager on your network but
are not running STP on your module, 3Com recommends that you select
the
agingOnly
option.
Interaction with
Transcend Enterprise
VLAN Manager
The
agingOnly
option in Release 3.0.5 is especially helpful if you use
3Com Transcend Enterprise VLAN Manager software because it helps to
prevent incorrect MAC address-based VLAN assignments.
Prior to Release 3.0.5, if you did not have STP enabled, a Layer 2 module
would not flush MAC addresses upon a link down event. It would only
age addresses according to the value set in
bridge agingTime
. This
situation can cause VLAN-assignment problems when endstations are
frequently plugged and unplugged into ports on the module and the
Transcend Enterprise VLAN Manager (EVM) application is used on the
network. That is, if a new endstation (with a new MAC address) is
plugged into a port prior to the aging out of the old MAC address on that
port, EVM may assign the endstation to the VLAN to which the old MAC
address belonged, which could be an incorrect VLAN for the new
endstation.
In summary, prior to Release 3.0.5, if you wanted addresses to age more
quickly after a link down event, you would have to enable STP. Now, with
the
agingOnly
option, you do not have to do that.
18
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IGHLIGHTS
Advanced
Autonegotiation
Advanced Autonegotiation is an enhancement to the standard
autonegotiation feature that is defined in the IEEE 802.3u specification,
which addresses how two ends of a 10/100-TX Ethernet connection
become synchronized in speed and duplex mode. Due to limitations of
the specification, certain configurations produce duplex mismatches that
generate errors, reduce network performance, and may even “lock up
an entire 802.3u-compliant switch. 3Com developed Advanced
Autonegotiation to overcome these limitations and correct duplex
mismatches on 10/100 links. In addition, although the 802.3u
specification does not apply to 100FX ports, Advanced Autonegotiation
also helps correct duplex mismatches on these links.
Sample Problem
Description
To illustrate the problem with the 802.3u specification:
Imagine a switch-to-switch connection (or switch-to-PC NIC connection)
where port A has standard autonegotiation enabled but port B does not
and instead is fixed at 100 Mbps and full duplex mode. The
auto-detection process in standard autonegotiation allows port A to
detect and match the speed of port B but port A cannot detect port B's
duplex mode and therefore port A defaults to half duplex mode per the
specification. Thus, a duplex mismatch exists and causes problems for the
link, switch, and network.
This problem affects any vendor’s switch that complies with the
IEEE 802.3u specification. It is not unique to 3Com.
In this example, if port B had been fixed in half duplex mode, then a
duplex mismatch would not have occurred.
How Advanced
Autonegotiation
Works
New to Software Release 3.0.5, Advanced Autonegotiation is related in
functionality to the Ethernet Port Monitoring feature that was introduced
in Software Release 3.0.
Port Monitoring monitors the error counters on specified ports and
provides notification via traps and messages on the management
interfaces. Port monitoring can also partition (temporarily disable) ports
that exceed a system error threshold.
Advanced Autonegotiation
19
As with Port Monitoring, Advanced Autonegotiation also monitors port
error levels and provides notification, but goes further by changing a
ports mode into full duplex mode. However, if errors continue to exceed
the system threshold, Advanced Autonegotiation partitions the port.
Configuration
Options
To provide flexibility, the Advanced Autonegotiation and Port Monitoring
features are enabled and disabled separately from standard
autonegotiation. The benefits of this arrangement include:
T
he Advanced Autonegotiation and Port Monitoring features can also
work for 100FX ports, which do not have an autonegotiation process.
Port Monitoring can be enabled for ports that have been set to
operate a fixed speed and duplex mode (autonegotiation is disabled).
Configuring Standard Autonegotiation
To enable or disable standard autonegotiation, at the CLI prompt, enter:
ethernet autoNegotiation
Then select a port or range of ports and enter either
enable
or
disable
.
Configuring a Fixed Port State
To set a fixed port state (standard autonegotiation is disabled), at the CLI
prompt, enter:
ethernet portMode
Then select a port or range of ports and enter the appropriate speed and
duplex mode.
Configuring Advanced Autonegotiation or Port Monitoring
To enable or disable either Advanced Autonegotiation or Port Monitoring,
at the CLI prompt, enter:
ethernet monitoring mode
Then select a port or range of ports, and enter one of these options:
disabled
— neither Port Monitoring nor Advanced Autonegotiation
is enabled.
enabled
— Port Monitoring is enabled
advanced
— Advanced Autonegotiation is enabled (includes the Port
Monitoring function)
20
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IGHLIGHTS
Sample
Configurations and
System Behavior
This section describes how the system behaves in certain feature
configurations. Refer to Table 3 when reading the corresponding
paragraphs below.
Configuration A
Ports autonegotiate connections according to the IEEE 802.3u
specification. Error conditions are not monitored. No alerts are sent and
preventive actions are not taken. If the remote port (the port to which the
switch is connected) is fixed in full duplex mode or uses a non-compliant
version of autonegotiation, duplex mismatches are likely to occur, causing
problems for the link, switch, and portions of the network that rely on
that switch. However, if standard autonegotiation is enabled on the
switch and the remote port, the speed and duplex modes will be set
correctly.
Configuration B
Ports autonegotiate connections according to the IEEE 802.3u
specification. The system monitors specified ports for errors and sends
alerts through traps and console messages. If the remote port is fixed in
full duplex mode or uses a non-compliant version of autonegotiation,
duplex mismatches are possible. However, the Port Monitoring feature
can partition ports with high error rates (which, incidentally, may also be
caused by factors other than duplex mismatches such as damaged
cabling).
The error threshold is fixed in system software; it is not user-configurable.
The initial time period in which a port is partitioned (disabled) is 30
seconds. When the system reenables the port, it also immediately
monitors the error conditions. If the error threshold is reached again, the
port is partitioned again. The time that the port is partitioned increases
with each incidence, up to a maximum of 5 minutes.
Table 3
Sample Configurations
Standard
Autonegotiation
Enabled
Port
Monitoring
Enabled
Advanced
Autonegotiation
Enabled
Configuration A Yes No No
Configuration B Yes Yes No
Configuration C Yes No Yes
Configuration D No Yes No
Configuration E No No Yes
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3com 4007 Release note

Category
Software
Type
Release note

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