Title: | DEChub/HUBwatch/PROBEwatch CONFERENCE |
Notice: | Firmware -2, Doc -3, Power -4, HW kits -5, firm load -6&7 |
Moderator: | NETCAD::COLELLA DT |
Created: | Wed Nov 13 1991 |
Last Modified: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 4455 |
Total number of notes: | 16761 |
I have been showing a customer how to use HUBwatch and he was impressed with the ability to bring up a host list for a repeater port (900FP), or search for a given MAC address. Trouble was it was very inconsistent. Sometimes HUBwatch found it sometimes it didn't. It seemed as though it could find DECnet format MAC addresses better than 08-00-2b... MAC addresses. (We were looking for a probe that was talking regularly) It never seemed to find the probe, even though it was connected to one of its segments,and an associated bridge could see it. So how long does the repeater keep a track of the MAC addresses it has seen, and when does it age them out? How many will it track on a segment? *. Another point was the host list display, it would show DECnet addresses as 2.14 for example but IP addresses were never shown or shown as 0.0.0.0? How do you get IP addresses, and can it display names instead? The 900FP had V1.0.1 firmware. Thanks Tim
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2043.1 | NETCAD::DRAGON | Fri Feb 24 1995 11:07 | 18 | ||
Hi Tim, I'm not sure off hand how long the addresses remain before being aged nor how many entries are maintained (one figure which I saw was 2-8 minutes). The Extended Repeater MIB states that this is implemention dependent (see erptrAddrDBPortAddrTable). Perhaps one of the Repeater FW folks would answer that one. As for finding DECnet format MAC addresses (ie AA-00-04...) better, this may be due to more frequent use of this format by the stations involved. Currently HUBwatch will not give you IP addresses nor will it give you IP names on the Windows platform. It is being looked into. Hope this helps, Bob | |||||
2043.2 | probe should not be a top talker | NAC::FORREST | Tue Mar 14 1995 11:50 | 8 | |
Per Engineering, a 256 entry table is kept of the most recently seen addresses. So, perhaps there's no aging time - but any given node's address should be seen immediately after it has transmitted. Unless you are actively getting data from a probe, it will be a silent listener. Even if you are graphing a statistic, the polling interval on the graph is probably at least 5 seconds. On a very large, busy LAN, this could be enough time to exceed the 256 node limit on the repeater. |