Expert symptoms, analyses, and network entities, Symptoms, Symptoms -10 – Finisar Surveyor User Manual

Page 214

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10-10

Surveyor

User’s Guide

Expert Symptoms, Analyses, and Network Entities

When you capture or monitor packets on a network segment, Surveyor immediately

begins constructing a database of network entities from the traffic it sees. Surveyor

uses protocol decoding to learn all about the connections, network stations, routing

nodes, and subnetworks related to the frames in the capture buffer. From this infor-

mation, Surveyor can detect potential problems on the network. These problems are

categorized as symptoms or analyses. Alarms can be set to automatically alert you

as these potential problems are discovered.
When viewing expert symptoms or analyses in the Summary area, double-click on a

Frame ID to jump to that frame in Capture View. Capture View shows the frame

decode. Double-click on an address to jump to a table highlighting an entry

describing the associated entity.

Symptoms

When the Expert detects an abnormal or unusual network event, it logs a symptom.

A symptom indicates that a threshold has been exceeded and may indicate a

problem on your network. Counters for symptoms can be used to trigger alarms.
Press the

Symptoms

tab on the Expert window to view network events that may

result in network problems. See Figure 10-1 and Figure 10-3 for examples of

displays of symptoms.

Tables in the Detail Area for Symptoms

The first list displays which types of symptoms and how many of them are found in

the connections between the two network stations.
The second list displays the network traffic of the first network station. It shows

how many packets and bytes of data are sent and received by the station. It shows

how many broadcast packets the station sent and the MAC addresses associated to

the station.
The third list displays the network traffic of the second network station, if present.
The fourth list displays the network traffic between the two network stations. It

shows how many packets and bytes of data are sent from the first to the second and

the second to the first.

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