Overview – Allied Telesis AT-S63 User Manual

Page 121

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AT-S63 Management Software Features Guide

Section I: Basic Operations

121

Overview

A port that is unable to maintain a reliable connection to a network node
may experience a condition referred to as link-flapping. This problem,
which is usually caused by intermittent problems with network cables or
network nodes, causes the state of a link on a port to fluctuate up and
down.

A fluctuating link can disrupt more than the connectivity of a single port.
Other switch operations may be affected as well. If, for instance, a
fluctuating link is part of a spanning tree domain or a member of an LACP
trunk, the switch will attempt to compensate by redirecting traffic away
from the link when it is down and to the link when it is up. Frequent traffic
redistributions such as this are an inefficient use of the switch’s resources
and can result in the additional loss of traffic.

Link-flap protection minimizes the disruption to your network from this type
of problem. It stabilizes the network topology by automatically disabling
ports that experiences link-flap events. A port that is disabled because of
link-flap events remains disabled until you enable it again with the
management software, such as with the standard ENABLE SWITCH
PORT command. The switch notifies you of link-flap events by entering
messages in the event logs and transmitting SNMP traps.

You define the rate and duration that constitute link-flap events. These
values are set at the switch level. The rate defines the number of link
changes that have to occur to signal a link-flap event. A link change is
defined as anytime a port loses a link or establishes a link to an end node.
When a port establishes a link to a network node, that represents one link
change. And when a port loses a link, that’s another link change. The rate
has a range of 4 to 65535 changes.

The duration is the time period in which the changes must occur. It has a
range of 20 to 65535 seconds.

The default values are ten changes for the rate and 60 seconds for the
duration. At these settings, a link-flap event is signaled when a port
experiences ten link changes in one minute. If, as an example, you set the
rate to five changes and the duration to 120 seconds, a link-flap event
occurs when a port’s link changes five times within two minutes.

While the rate and the duration are set at the switch level, link-flap
protection is activated at the port level. This means you can activate it on
just those ports where you believe the problem is most likely to occur or
that are connected to devices that are critical to the functioning of your
network. This feature requires only minimal processing by the switch,
however, and can be activated on all of the switch’s ports without affecting
network performance.

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