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Message |
Guest
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Posted:
Tue Nov 01, 2005 3:17 am Post subject:
Netgear GSM7224 switch playing dumb |
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My request on the netgear forums wasnt getting much attention, so I
will try here. I recently found out I have a Netgear GSM7224 24 point
gigabit switch. Upon visual inspection, I immediately noticed the
synchronously flashing lights on the netgear. Sure enough, plugging
ethereal on my lap top (no ip configured) into the switch, I received
tons of frames destined for end devices on the switch. Its like the
switch is playing dumb and forwarding all frames to all ports. As far
as I can tell the switch is in its default configuration. All ports
are set to Untagged and Included in VLAN 1 (the default vlan). LACP
has been disabled on all ports. I am not doing anything crazy on this
thing, but it would rather be a hub/repeater than a switch. I upgraded
code to the latest release this morning - still no go. Anyone else
out there have this problem with netgear? Or have a suggestion as to
the why behind this behavior? Thanks in advance.
Here is an example packet that is supposed to go from port 6 to port 21
on the switch - but all ports are getting it. The MAC addresses for
each of these locations are in the MAC-addr-table (the only macs on
their respective ports). Here is the header on an ethereal capture:
Frame 5453 (1366 bytes on wire, 1366 bytes captured)
Arrival Time: Oct 31, 2005 12:18:28.856193000
Time delta from previous packet: 0.000112000 seconds
Time since reference or first frame: 33.368478000 seconds
Frame Number: 5453
Packet Length: 1366 bytes
Capture Length: 1366 bytes
Protocols in frame: eth:ip:tcp:nbss:smb
Ethernet II, Src: 10.1.252.7 (00:06:5b:f1:79:cc), Dst: 10.1.252.56
(02:bf:0a:01:fc:1e)
Destination: 10.1.252.56 (02:bf:0a:01:fc:1e)
Source: 10.1.252.7 (00:06:5b:f1:79:cc)
Type: IP (0x0800)
Internet Protocol, Src: 10.1.252.7 (10.1.252.7), Dst: 10.1.252.56
(10.1.252.56) |
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News Me
Guest
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Posted:
Tue Nov 01, 2005 6:57 am Post subject:
Re: Netgear GSM7224 switch playing dumb |
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jere@cassidyweb.com wrote:
| Quote: | My request on the netgear forums wasnt getting much attention, so I
will try here. I recently found out I have a Netgear GSM7224 24 point
gigabit switch. Upon visual inspection, I immediately noticed the
synchronously flashing lights on the netgear. Sure enough, plugging
ethereal on my lap top (no ip configured) into the switch, I received
tons of frames destined for end devices on the switch. Its like the
switch is playing dumb and forwarding all frames to all ports. As far
as I can tell the switch is in its default configuration. All ports
are set to Untagged and Included in VLAN 1 (the default vlan). LACP
has been disabled on all ports. I am not doing anything crazy on this
thing, but it would rather be a hub/repeater than a switch. I upgraded
code to the latest release this morning - still no go. Anyone else
out there have this problem with netgear? Or have a suggestion as to
the why behind this behavior? Thanks in advance.
Here is an example packet that is supposed to go from port 6 to port 21
on the switch - but all ports are getting it. The MAC addresses for
each of these locations are in the MAC-addr-table (the only macs on
their respective ports). Here is the header on an ethereal capture:
Frame 5453 (1366 bytes on wire, 1366 bytes captured)
Arrival Time: Oct 31, 2005 12:18:28.856193000
Time delta from previous packet: 0.000112000 seconds
Time since reference or first frame: 33.368478000 seconds
Frame Number: 5453
Packet Length: 1366 bytes
Capture Length: 1366 bytes
Protocols in frame: eth:ip:tcp:nbss:smb
Ethernet II, Src: 10.1.252.7 (00:06:5b:f1:79:cc), Dst: 10.1.252.56
(02:bf:0a:01:fc:1e)
Destination: 10.1.252.56 (02:bf:0a:01:fc:1e)
Source: 10.1.252.7 (00:06:5b:f1:79:cc)
Type: IP (0x0800)
Internet Protocol, Src: 10.1.252.7 (10.1.252.7), Dst: 10.1.252.56
(10.1.252.56)
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Looking at the packet dump, it looks like, for the destination node at
least, you are using locally administered MAC addresses and encoding the
IP address in the MAC address. (Reminds me of my DECnet days...) For
the destination node we have:
Destination: 10.1.252.56 (02:bf:0a:01:fc:1e)
The last four bytes of this MAC address, written in dotted decimal
notation, is 10.1.252.30. I would look for the node with IP address
10.1.252.30 and see if it is using the same MAC address. Duplicate MAC
addresses can caused a variety of problems.
NM
--
convert UPPERCASE NUMBER to a numeral to reply |
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scott
Guest
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Posted:
Tue Nov 01, 2005 5:20 pm Post subject:
Re: Netgear GSM7224 switch playing dumb |
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we are having the exact same issue. been looking at it for (2) days
now but can not seem to locate the problem.
j...@cassidyweb.com wrote:
| Quote: | My request on the netgear forums wasnt getting much attention, so I
will try here. I recently found out I have a Netgear GSM7224 24 point
gigabit switch. Upon visual inspection, I immediately noticed the
synchronously flashing lights on the netgear. Sure enough, plugging
ethereal on my lap top (no ip configured) into the switch, I received
tons of frames destined for end devices on the switch. Its like the
switch is playing dumb and forwarding all frames to all ports. As far
as I can tell the switch is in its default configuration. All ports
are set to Untagged and Included in VLAN 1 (the default vlan). LACP
has been disabled on all ports. I am not doing anything crazy on this
thing, but it would rather be a hub/repeater than a switch. I upgraded
code to the latest release this morning - still no go. Anyone else
out there have this problem with netgear? Or have a suggestion as to
the why behind this behavior? Thanks in advance.
Here is an example packet that is supposed to go from port 6 to port 21
on the switch - but all ports are getting it. The MAC addresses for
each of these locations are in the MAC-addr-table (the only macs on
their respective ports). Here is the header on an ethereal capture:
Frame 5453 (1366 bytes on wire, 1366 bytes captured)
Arrival Time: Oct 31, 2005 12:18:28.856193000
Time delta from previous packet: 0.000112000 seconds
Time since reference or first frame: 33.368478000 seconds
Frame Number: 5453
Packet Length: 1366 bytes
Capture Length: 1366 bytes
Protocols in frame: eth:ip:tcp:nbss:smb
Ethernet II, Src: 10.1.252.7 (00:06:5b:f1:79:cc), Dst: 10.1.252.56
(02:bf:0a:01:fc:1e)
Destination: 10.1.252.56 (02:bf:0a:01:fc:1e)
Source: 10.1.252.7 (00:06:5b:f1:79:cc)
Type: IP (0x0800)
Internet Protocol, Src: 10.1.252.7 (10.1.252.7), Dst: 10.1.252.56
(10.1.252.56) |
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Guest
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Posted:
Tue Nov 01, 2005 11:21 pm Post subject:
Re: Netgear GSM7224 switch playing dumb |
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Thank you very much. One thing I tried to do (in desperation really)
was to move all the ports except 1 (so management still worked) to a
different VLAN. This mostly fixed the problem! -- except i was still
getting a few conversations between machines with those 02.bf
addresses. Those software, or locally administered, mac-addresses you
point out are in some way related to MS NLB load balancing. I just
found out that its legitamate traffic I need to support. There are some
accounts of that software hosing switches (i understand microsoft
themselves recommend using a hub instead of a switch for the load
balanced ports).
Im also not sure why the switch acted more poorly on the default vlan
than on the one i created though.
Thanks again. |
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Guest
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Posted:
Wed Nov 02, 2005 7:08 am Post subject:
Re: Netgear GSM7224 switch playing dumb |
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During peak time - it was apparent that the switch was NOT acting more
poorly the default vlan. An news group article as well as several
microsoft knowledge base articles helped explain MS NLB and why its
doing what it is doing. It affected even server-to-server
communication - the traffic being spammed out was not just clients of
the cluster.
For all those that find this thread searching for a similar problem
that might be clustering/MS NLB related, a great resource for this info
was http://www.nw-america.com |
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