PLANET GS-5220-16S8C User Manual

Page 331

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User’s Manual of GS-5220 Series

LLDP

LLDP is an IEEE 802.1ab standard protocol.

The Link Layer Discovery Protocol(LLDP) specified in this standard allows stations attached to an IEEE 802 LAN to

advertise, to other stations attached to the same IEEE 802 LAN, the major capabilities provided by the system

incorporating that station, the management address or addresses of the entity or entities that provide management of

those capabilities, and the identification of the stations point of attachment to the IEEE 802 LAN required by those

management entity or entities. The information distributed via this protocol is stored by its recipients in a standard

Management Information Base (MIB), making it possible for the information to be accessed by a Network Management

System (NMS) using a management protocol such as the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP).

LLDP-MED

LLDP-MED is an extendsion of IEEE 802.1ab and is defined by the telecommunication industry association

(TIA-1057).

LOC

LOC is an acronym for Loss Of Connectivity and is detected by a MEP and is indicating lost connectivity in the network.

Can be used as a switch criteria by EPS

M

MAC Table

Switching of frames is based upon the DMAC address contained in the frame. The switch builds up a table that maps

MAC addresses to switch ports for knowing which ports the frames should go to ( based upon the DMAC address in

the frame ). This table contains both static and dynamic entries. The static entries are configured by the network

administrator if the administrator wants to do a fixed mapping between the DMAC address and switch ports.

The frames also contain a MAC address ( SMAC address ), which shows the MAC address of the equipment sending

the frame. The SMAC address is used by the switch to automatically update the MAC table with these dynamic MAC

addresses. Dynamic entries are removed from the MAC table if no frame with the corresponding SMAC address have

been seen after a configurable age time.

MEP

MEP is an acronym for Maintenance Entity Endpoint and is an endpoint in a Maintenance Entity Group (ITU-T Y.1731).

MD5

MD5 is an acronym for Message-Digest algorithm 5. MD5 is a message digest algorithm, used cryptographic hash

function with a 128-bit hash value. It was designed by Ron Rivest in 1991. MD5 is officially defined in RFC 1321 - The

MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm.

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