04-Network Connectivity

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01-MAC address table commands
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MAC address table commands

 

This document covers the configuration of unicast MAC address entries, including static, dynamic, blackhole, and multiport unicast MAC address entries. For more information about configuring static multicast MAC address entries, see IGMP snooping and IPv6 multicast routing and forwarding in IP Multicast Configuration Guide. For more information about MAC address table configuration in VPLS, see MPLS Configuration Guide.

display mac-address

Use display mac-address to display MAC address entries.

Syntax

display mac-address [ mac-address [ vlan vlan-id ] | [ [ dynamic | static ] [ interface interface-type interface-number ] | blackhole ] [ vlan vlan-id ] [ count ] ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

mac-address: Specifies a MAC address in the format of H-H-H. When entering a MAC address, you can omit the leading zeros in each H section. For example, enter f-e2-1 for 000f-00e2-0001.

vlan vlan-id: Specifies a VLAN by its ID in the range of 1 to 4094.

dynamic: Displays dynamic MAC address entries.

static: Displays static MAC address entries.

interface interface-type interface-number: Specifies an interface by its type and number.

blackhole: Displays blackhole MAC address entries.

count: Displays only the number of MAC address entries that match all entry attributes you specify in the command. Detailed information about MAC address entries is not displayed. For example, you can use the display mac-address vlan 20 dynamic count command to display the number of dynamic entries for VLAN 20. If you do not specify an entry attribute, the command displays the number of entries in the MAC address table. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays detailed information about the specified MAC address entries.

Usage guidelines

Use this command to display static, dynamic, or blackhole MAC address entries. A MAC address entry includes a destination MAC address, an outgoing interface, and a VLAN ID.

If you do not specify any parameters, the command displays all MAC address entries.

This command displays dynamic MAC address entries for an aggregate interface only when the aggregate interface has a minimum of one Selected member port.

Examples

# Display MAC address entries for VLAN 100.

<Sysname> display mac-address vlan 100

MAC Address      VLAN ID    State            Port/Nickname            Aging

0033-0033-0033   100        Blackhole        N/A                      N

0000-0000-0002   100        Static           GE1/0/1                  N

00e0-fc00-5829   100        Learned          GE1/0/2                  Y

# Display the number of MAC address entries.

<Sysname> display mac-address count

1 mac address(es) found.

Table 1 Command output

Field

Description

VLAN ID

ID of the VLAN to which the outgoing interface of the MAC address entry belongs.

State

MAC address entry state:

·     Static—Static MAC address entry.

·     Learned—Dynamic MAC address entry. Dynamic entries can be learned or manually configured.

·     Blackhole—Blackhole MAC address entry.

Port/Nickname

When the field displays an interface name, the field indicates the outgoing interface for packets that are destined for the MAC address. This field displays N/A for a blackhole MAC address entry.

The Nickname field is not supported in the current software version.

Aging

Whether the entry can age out:

·     Y—The entry can age out.

·     N—The entry never ages out.

mac address(es) found

Number of matching MAC address entries.

 

Related commands

mac-address

mac-address timer

display mac-address aging-time

Use display mac-address aging-time to display the aging timer for dynamic MAC address entries.

Syntax

display mac-address aging-time

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Examples

# Display the aging timer for dynamic MAC address entries.

<Sysname> display mac-address aging-time

MAC address aging time: 300s.

Related commands

mac-address timer

display mac-address mac-learning

Use display mac-address mac-learning to display the global MAC address learning status and the MAC learning status of the specified interface or all interfaces.

Syntax

display mac-address mac-learning [ interface interface-type interface-number ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

interface interface-type interface-number: Specifies an interface by its type and number. If you do not specify an interface, the command displays the global MAC address learning status and the MAC address learning status of all interfaces.

Examples

# Display the global MAC address learning status and the MAC learning status of all interfaces.

<Sysname> display mac-address mac-learning

Global MAC address learning status: Enabled.

 

Port                         Learning Status

GE1/0/1                      Enabled

GE1/0/2                      Enabled

Table 2 Command output

Field

Description

Global MAC address learning status

Global MAC address learning status:

·     Enabled.

·     Disabled.

Learning Status

MAC address learning status of an interface:

·     Enabled.

·     Disabled.

 

Related commands

mac-address mac-learning enable

mac-address (interface view)

Use mac-address to add or modify a MAC address entry on an interface.

Use undo mac-address to delete a MAC address entry on an interface.

Syntax

Layer 2 Ethernet interface view and Layer 2 aggregate interface view:

mac-address { dynamic | static } mac-address vlan vlan-id

undo mac-address { dynamic | static } mac-address vlan vlan-id

Default

An interface is not configured with MAC address entries.

Views

Layer 2 Ethernet interface view

Layer 2 aggregate interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

dynamic: Specifies dynamic MAC address entries.

static: Specifies static MAC address entries.

mac-address: Specifies a MAC address in the format of H-H-H, excluding multicast, all-zero, and all-F MAC addresses. When entering a MAC address, you can omit the leading zeros in each H section. For example, enter f-e2-1 for 000f-00e2-0001.

vlan vlan-id: Specifies an existing VLAN to which the specified interface belongs. The value range for the vlan-id argument is 1 to 4094.

Usage guidelines

Typically, the device automatically builds the MAC address table by learning the source MAC addresses of incoming frames on each interface. However, you can manually configure static MAC address entries. For a MAC address, a manually configured static entry takes precedence over a dynamically learned entry. To improve the security for the user device connected to an interface, manually configure a static entry to bind the user device to the interface. Then, the frames destined for the user device (for example, Host A) are always sent out of the interface. Other hosts using the forged MAC address of Host A cannot obtain the frames destined for Host A.

The MAC address entry configuration cannot survive a reboot unless you save it. The dynamic MAC address entries, however, are lost upon reboot whether or not you save the configuration.

Examples

# Add a static entry for MAC address 000f-e201-0101 on GigabitEthernet 1/0/1 that belongs to VLAN 2.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface gigabitethernet 1/0/1

[Sysname-GigabitEthernet1/0/1] mac-address static 000f-e201-0101 vlan 2

# Add a static entry for MAC address 000f-e201-0101 on Bridge-Aggregation 1 that belongs to VLAN 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface bridge-aggregation 1

[Sysname-Bridge-Aggregation1] mac-address static 000f-e201-0102 vlan 1

Related commands

display mac-address

mac-address (system view)

mac-address (system view)

Use mac-address to add or modify a MAC address entry.

Use undo mac-address to delete one or all MAC address entries.

Syntax

mac-address { dynamic | static } mac-address interface interface-type interface-number vlan vlan-id

mac-address blackhole mac-address vlan vlan-id

undo mac-address [ [ dynamic | static ] mac-address interface interface-type interface-number vlan vlan-id ]

undo mac-address [ blackhole | dynamic | static ] [ mac-address ] vlan vlan-id

undo mac-address [ dynamic | static ] interface interface-type interface-number

undo mac-address [ [ mac-address ] vlan vlan-id ]

Default

The system is not configured with MAC address entries.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

dynamic: Specifies dynamic MAC address entries.

static: Specifies static MAC address entries.

blackhole: Specifies blackhole MAC address entries. Packets whose source or destination MAC addresses match blackhole MAC address entries are dropped.

mac-address: Specifies a MAC address in the format of H-H-H, excluding multicast, all-zero, and all-F MAC addresses. When entering a MAC address, you can omit the leading zeros in each H section. For example, enter f-e2-1 for 000f-00e2-0001.

vlan vlan-id: Specifies an existing VLAN to which the interface belongs. The value range for the vlan-id argument is 1 to 4094.

interface interface-type interface-number: Specifies an outgoing interface by its type and number.

Usage guidelines

You can use this command to configure the following types of MAC address entries:

·     Dynamic entries.

Dynamic entries include manually configured dynamic entries and automatically learned dynamic entries.

·     Static entries.

For a MAC address, a manually configured static entry takes precedence over a dynamic entry. To improve the security for the user device connected to an interface, manually configure a static entry to bind the user device to the interface. Then, the frames destined for the user device (for example, Host A) are always sent out of the interface. Other hosts using the forged MAC address of Host A cannot obtain the frames destined for Host A.

·     Blackhole entries.

To drop frames with the specified source MAC addresses or destination MAC addresses, you can configure blackhole entries.

A static or blackhole entry can overwrite a dynamic entry, but not vice versa.

If you execute the undo mac-address command without specifying any parameters, this command deletes all unicast MAC address entries and static multicast MAC address entries.

You can delete all the MAC address entries (including unicast and static multicast MAC address entries) from the specified VLAN. You can also delete only one type (dynamic, static, or blackhole) of MAC address entries.

The MAC address entry configuration cannot survive a reboot unless you save it. The dynamic MAC address entries, however, are lost upon reboot whether or not you save the configuration.

Examples

# Add a static entry for MAC address 000f-e201-0101. Then, all frames that are destined for this MAC address are sent out of GigabitEthernet 1/0/1, which belongs to VLAN 2.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] mac-address static 000f-e201-0101 interface gigabitethernet 1/0/1 vlan 2

Related commands

display mac-address

mac-address (interface view)

mac-address mac-learning enable

Use mac-address mac-learning enable to enable MAC address learning globally, on an interface, or on a VLAN.

Use undo mac-address mac-learning enable to enable MAC address learning globally, on an interface, or on a VLAN.

Syntax

mac-address mac-learning enable

undo mac-address mac-learning enable

Default

MAC address learning is enabled.

Views

System view

Layer 2 Ethernet interface view

Layer 2 aggregate interface view

VLAN view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

To prevent the MAC address table from becoming saturated, you can disable MAC address learning.

For example, a number of packets with different source MAC addresses reaching a device can affect the MAC address table update. To avoid such attacks, you can disable MAC address learning by following these guidelines:

·     You can disable MAC address learning on a per-interface basis.

·     Because disabling MAC address learning can result in broadcast storms, enable broadcast storm suppression after you disable MAC address learning on an interface. For more information about broadcast storm suppression, see Interface Configuration Guide.

·     With MAC address learning enabled globally, you can disable MAC address learning for an interface or VLAN.

·     After MAC address learning is disabled, existing dynamic MAC address entries can age out.

Examples

# Disable MAC address learning globally.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] undo mac-address mac-learning enable

# Disable MAC address learning for VLAN 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] vlan 10

[Sysname-vlan10] undo mac-address mac-learning enable

# Disable MAC address learning on GigabitEthernet 1/0/1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface gigabitethernet 1/0/1

[Sysname-GigabitEthernet1/0/1] undo mac-address mac-learning enable

# Disable MAC address learning on Bridge-Aggregation 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface bridge-aggregation 1

[Sysname-Bridge-Aggregation1] undo mac-address mac-learning enable

Related commands

display mac-address mac-learning

mac-address mac-learning priority

Use mac-address mac-learning priority to assign MAC learning priority to an interface.

Use undo mac-address mac-learning priority to restore the default.

Syntax

mac-address mac-learning priority { high | low }

undo mac-address mac-learning priority

Default

Low MAC address learning priority is used.

Views

Layer 2 Ethernet interface view

Layer 2 aggregate interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

high: Assigns high MAC learning priority.

low: Assigns low MAC learning priority.

Usage guidelines

The MAC address learning priority values can be high and low. An interface with high MAC address learning priority can learn any MAC address. An interface with low MAC address learning priority can learn only the MAC addresses that have not been learned by high-priority interfaces.

The MAC learning priority mechanism can help defend your network against MAC address spoofing attacks. To prevent the downlink interface from learning the MAC address of an upper layer device (for example, the gateway), you can perform the following tasks:

·     Assign high MAC learning priority to an uplink interface.

·     Assign low MAC learning priority to a downlink interface.

Examples

# Assign high MAC learning priority to GigabitEthernet 1/0/1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface gigabitethernet 1/0/1

[Sysname-GigabitEthernet1/0/1] mac-address mac-learning priority high

# Assign high MAC learning priority to Bridge-Aggregation 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface bridge-aggregation 1

[Sysname-Bridge-Aggregation1] mac-address mac-learning priority high

mac-address max-mac-count

Use mac-address max-mac-count to set the MAC learning limit on an interface.

Use undo mac-address max-mac-count to restore the default.

Syntax

mac-address max-mac-count count

undo mac-address max-mac-count

Default

The MAC learning limit on an interface is 1000.

Views

Layer 2 Ethernet interface view

Layer 2 aggregate interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

count: Specifies the maximum number of MAC addresses that can be learned on an interface. When the argument is set to 0, the interface is not allowed to learn MAC addresses. The value range for this argument is 0 to 1000.

Usage guidelines

This command helps limit the MAC address table size. When the number of MAC address entries learned by an interface reaches the limit, the interface stops learning MAC address entries.

Examples

# Configure GigabitEthernet 1/0/1 to learn a maximum of 200 MAC address entries.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface gigabitethernet 1/0/1

[Sysname-GigabitEthernet1/0/1] mac-address max-mac-count 200

Related commands

mac-address

mac-address max-mac-count enable-forwarding (interface view)

mac-address max-mac-count enable-forwarding (interface view)

Use mac-address max-mac-count enable-forwarding to enable the device to forward unknown frames received on an interface after the MAC learning limit on the interface is reached. Unknown frames refer to frames whose source MAC addresses are not in the MAC address table.

Use undo mac-address max-mac-count enable-forwarding to disable the device from forwarding unknown frames received on an interface after the MAC learning limit on the interface is reached.

Syntax

mac-address max-mac-count enable-forwarding

undo mac-address max-mac-count enable-forwarding

Default

When the MAC learning limit on an interface is reached, the device can forward unknown frames received on the interface.

Views

Layer 2 Ethernet interface view

Layer 2 aggregate interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Examples

# Configure GigabitEthernet 1/0/1 to learn a maximum of 200 MAC address entries.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface gigabitethernet 1/0/1

[Sysname-GigabitEthernet1/0/1] mac-address max-mac-count 200

# Disable the device from forwarding unknown frames received on GigabitEthernet 1/0/1 after the MAC learning limit on GigabitEthernet 1/0/1 is reached.

[Sysname-GigabitEthernet1/0/1] undo mac-address max-mac-count enable-forwarding

Related commands

mac-address

mac-address max-mac-count

mac-address notification mac-move

Use mac-address notification mac-move to enable MAC address move notifications and optionally specify a MAC move detection interval.

Use undo mac-address notification mac-move to disable MAC address move notifications.

Syntax

mac-address notification mac-move [ interval interval ]

undo mac-address notification mac-move

Default

MAC address move notifications are disabled.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

interval interval: Specifies the interval for detecting MAC address moves, in the range of 1 to 60 minutes. If you do not specify this option, the default setting of 1 minute is used.

Usage guidelines

With MAC address move notifications enabled, the system records the MAC address move logs every MAC move detection interval. Each record of the MAC address move logs contains the following information:

·     MAC address.

·     VLAN ID of the MAC address entry.

·     Current port and source port of the MAC address moves.

·     Number of MAC address moves within a detection interval.

A MAC address can have only one MAC address move record. If a MAC address moves multiple times, the new record overrides the old record.

Within a detection interval, the device can record MAC address move information for a maximum of 20 MAC addresses. If the limit is reached, the device only updates existing records, and new MAC address moves are not recorded. Then in the next detection interval, a new MAC address move record will overwrite the earliest one generated in the previous detection interval.

After you execute this command, the system sends only syslog messages to the information center module. If the snmp-agent trap enable mac-address command is also executed, the system also sends SNMP notifications to the SNMP module.

Examples

# Enable MAC address move notifications.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] mac-address notification mac-move

[Sysname]

%May 14 17:16:45:688 2013 Sysname MAC/4/MAC_FLAPPING: MAC address 0000-0012-0034 in VLAN 500 has moved from port GE1/0/1 to port GE1/0/2 for 1 times

The output shows that:

·     The VLAN ID of MAC address 0000-0012-0034 is VLAN 500.

·     The MAC address moved from GigabitEthernet 1/0/1 to GigabitEthernet 1/0/2.

·     The MAC address has moved once within a MAC move detection interval.

Related commands

display mac-address mac-move

mac-address notification mac-move suppression (interface view)

Use mac-address notification mac-move suppression to enable MAC address move suppression on an interface.

Use undo mac-address notification mac-move suppression to disable MAC address move suppression on an interface.

Syntax

mac-address notification mac-move suppression

undo mac-address notification mac-move suppression

Default

MAC address moves are not suppressed.

Views

Layer 2 Ethernet interface view

Layer 2 aggregate interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

This feature shuts an interface down when a MAC address has been moved to or from the interface more than the suppression threshold within a MAC move detection interval. The shutdown interface automatically goes up after a suppression interval. Also, you can use the shutdown command and then the undo shutdown command to bring up the interface.

When MAC address move suppression shuts an interface down, the system sends only syslog messages to the information center module. If the snmp-agent trap enable mac-address command is also executed, the system also sends SNMP notifications to the SNMP module.

Examples

# Enable MAC address move suppression on GigabitEthernet 1/0/1.

[Sysname] interface gigabitethernet 1/0/1

[Sysname-GigabitEthernet1/0/1] mac-address notification mac-move suppression

Related commands

mac-address notification mac-move suppression (system view)

mac-address notification mac-move suppression (system view)

Use mac-address notification mac-move suppression to set the suppression interval or the suppression threshold.

Use undo mac-address notification mac-move suppression to restore the default.

Syntax

mac-address notification mac-move suppression { interval interval | threshold threshold }

undo mac-address notification mac-move suppression { interval | threshold }

Default

The suppression interval is 30 seconds. The suppression threshold is 3.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

interval interval: Specifies the MAC address move suppression interval during which a suppressed interface stays down. The value range for the interval-value argument is 30 to 86400 seconds. If you do not specify this option, the default suppression interval of 30 seconds is used.

threshold threshold: Specifies the suppression threshold for MAC address moves sourced from or destined for an interface within a MAC move detection interval. The value range for this argument is 0 to 1024. If you do not specify this option, the default suppression threshold of 3 is used.

Usage guidelines

For this command to take effect on an interface, you must also enable MAC address move suppression on the interface.

If you set the suppression interval or suppression threshold multiple times, the most recent configuration applies. The suppression interval setting is independent of the suppression threshold setting.

Examples

# Set the suppression interval to 40 seconds and the suppression threshold to 1 for MAC address moves.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] mac-address notification mac-move suppression interval 40

[Sysname] mac-address notification mac-move suppression threshold 1

Related commands

mac-address notification mac-move suppression (interface view)

mac-address timer

Use mac-address timer to set the aging timer for dynamic MAC address entries.

Use undo mac-address timer to restore the default.

Syntax

mac-address timer { aging seconds | no-aging }

undo mac-address timer

Default

The aging timer is 300 seconds for dynamic MAC address entries.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

aging seconds: Specifies an aging timer for dynamic MAC address entries, in seconds. The value range for the seconds argument is 10 to 630.

no-aging: Configures dynamic MAC address entries not to age.

Usage guidelines

To set the aging timer appropriately, follow these guidelines:

·     A long aging interval causes the MAC address table to retain outdated entries and fail to accommodate the most recent network changes.

·     A short aging interval results in removal of valid entries. Then, unnecessary broadcast packets appear and affect device performance.

Examples

# Set the aging time to 500 seconds for dynamic MAC address entries.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] mac-address timer aging 500

Related commands

display mac-address aging-time

snmp-agent trap enable mac-address

Use snmp-agent trap enable mac-address to enable SNMP notifications for the MAC address table.

Use undo snmp-agent trap enable mac-address to disable SNMP notifications for the MAC address table.

Syntax

snmp-agent trap enable mac-address [ mac-move ]

undo snmp-agent trap enable mac-address [ mac-move ]

Default

SNMP notifications are enabled for the MAC address table.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

mac-move: Specifies notifications about the MAC address moves for the MAC address table. If you do not specify this keyword, the command enables all types of SNMP notifications for the MAC address table.

Usage guidelines

To report critical MAC address move events to an NMS, enable SNMP notifications for the MAC address table. For MAC address move event notifications to be sent correctly, you must also configure SNMP on the device.

When SNMP notifications are disabled for the MAC address table, the device sends the generated logs to the information center. To display the logs, configure the log destination and output rule configuration in the information center.

For information about SNMP and information center configuration, see Network Management and Monitoring Configuration Guide and System Management Configuration Guide, respectively.

The MAC address table supports only SNMP notifications about MAC address moves. When you enable or disable SNMP notifications about MAC address moves, you enable or disable all types of SNMP notifications for the MAC address table.

Examples

# Disable SNMP notifications about MAC address moves for the MAC address table.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] undo snmp-agent trap enable mac-address mac-move

Related commands

mac-address notification mac-move

 

 

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