Cdp neighbor data and mib objects, Cdp neighbor data and mib objects -25 – IronPort Systems 4108GL User Manual

Page 255

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12-25

Configuring for Network Management Applications

CDP

M

oni
to

rin

g

and

M

ana

gi

ng

th

e

Sw

itc
h

Figure 12-15. Example of IP Address Selection when the CDP Neighbor Has Multiple VLANs with IP
Addresses

CDP Neighbor Data and MIB Objects

The switch places the data received from inbound CDP packets into its MIB
(Management Information Base). This data is available in three ways:

Using the switch’s

show cdp neighbors

command to display a subset of

Neighbor data

Using the

walkmib

command to display a listing of the CDP MIB objects

Electronically, using an SNMP utility designed to search the MIB for
CDP data

As shown under “Viewing the Current Contents of the Switch’s CDP Neighbors
Table” on page 12-19
, you can list a subset of data for each CDP device
currently found in the switch’s CDP Neighbors table. Table 12-2, "CDP
Neighbors Data", describes the CDP Neighbor data set available in the Switch
4108GL.

Switch "X"

CDP Enabled on Port A1

CDP Neighbor Table

Port | Data
------|------------------
A1 | 10.28.227.103

Switch "Y"

CDP Enabled on Port C5

CDP Neighbor Table

Port | Data
------|------------------
C5 | Switch "X" data

Port A1

Port C5

VLAN Membership in Port C5 of Switch "Y" VID

IP Address?

DEFAULT_VLAN (Primary VLAN)

1

No

Blue_VLAN

200

10.28.227.103

Red VLAN

300

10.28.227.88

Thus, CDP switch "X" detects CDP switch "Y" on port A1 and shows 10.28.227.103 in its CDP table entry because in CDP switch "Y" the
Primary VLAN does not have an IP address and the Blue_VLAN has a lower VID than the Red_VLAN.

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