Integrating Cisco Press Resources into the Academy Classroom

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Transcript Integrating Cisco Press Resources into the Academy Classroom

Switching Basics and Intermediate
Routing CCNA 3
Chapter 6
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Catalyst Switch Configuration
Introduction
• Switches are Layer 2 devices that serve as
concentration points for the connection of workstations,
servers, routers, hubs, and other switches
• Switches are multiport bridges that utilize a star topology
• Switches provide dedicated, point-to-point virtual circuits
that make collisions unlikely
• New switches are configured with factory defaults but
normally need changes
• Switches can be configured from a command-line
interface (CLI) or from a web-based interface
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Catalyst Switch Configuration
Introduction
• Network engineers must be familiar with
these switch configuration tasks:
– Maintenance of the switch
– Cisco IOS upgrades
– Management of interfaces and switching
tables
– Password recovery
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Starting the Switch
Physical Startup of the Catalyst Switch
• Most Catalyst switches have no power
switch!
– Simply plug in to start
• Before starting the switch, verify the
following:
– All network cables are secure
– A terminal is connected to the console port
– A console terminal application, such as
HyperTerminal, is selected
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Starting the Switch
Physical Startup of the Catalyst Switch
• Steps in starting a switch (continued)
– Attach the power cord to the switch
– Observe the boot sequence
• Look at the LEDs on the switch
• Observe the Cisco IOS software output text on the
console
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Starting the Switch
Switch Port Types
• Switches in the Catalyst 2950 series have these
characteristics:
– 12-port, 24-port, or 48-port
– All ports are FastEthernet
– Optional uplink slots for copper or fiber Gigabit
Interface Converter (GBIC) modules
• Asymmetrical switching
• Switches such as the Catalyst 3750 now include
small-form-factor pluggable (SFP) slots, which
are smaller than GBIC slots
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Starting the Switch
Switch Port Types
Catalyst
2950
Switches
Are Used
at the
Access
Layer
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Starting the Switch
Switch Port Types
Four Slots on the Right of These Catalyst 3750
Switches are SFP Slots
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Starting the Switch
Switch LED Indicators
• The following LEDs are seen on the front
of a Catalyst 2950 switch:
– System LED
• Tells whether the system is receiving power and
functioning properly
– Redundant Power Supply (RPS) LED
• Indicates whether a redundant power supply is in
use
– Port Mode LEDs
– Port Status LEDs
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Starting the Switch
Switch LED Indicators
Catalyst 2950 Switches Have Four Types of LEDs
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Starting the Switch
Switch LED Indicators
System LED and RPS LED
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Starting the Switch
Switch LED Indicators
• After power cable is connected, the switch
initiates a series of tests called the poweron self test (POST)
– Runs automatically to verify the switch
functions correctly
– System LED indicates the status of the POST
• System LED off but switch is plugged in, the POST
is running
• System LED is green: POST successful
• System LED is amber: POST failed (fatal error)
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Starting the Switch
Switch LED Indicators
• Port Mode LEDs indicate the state of the
Mode button
– Press the Mode button repeatedly until the
desired mode is selected
• Port Status LEDs indicate various port
states
– Depends on the value of the Port Mode LEDs
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Starting the Switch
Switch LED Indicators
Catalyst 2950 Port Status LED Display Modes
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Starting the Switch
Switch LED Indicators
Catalyst 2950
Port Status
LED Display
Modes
(continued)
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Starting the Switch
Switch LED Indicators
Catalyst 2950 Port Status LED Display Modes
(continued)
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Starting the Switch
Viewing Initial Bootup Output from the Switch
• Connect a computer’s COM port to a switch’s
console port using a rollover cable
Console Connection to the Switch Is the Most Common
Configuration Method
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Starting the Switch
Viewing Initial Bootup Output from the Switch
• Start HyperTerminal on the computer
– Choose the Serial Port
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Starting the Switch
Viewing Initial Bootup Output from the Switch
• Name the
connection
• After selecting the
COM port, click the
OK button
– Set up the parameters
as seen in this figure
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Starting the Switch
Viewing Initial Bootup Output from the Switch
• Plug the switch into the wall outlet
• Initial bootup output should be displayed
on the HyperTerminal screen
– Contains details about POST status and
switch hardware
– After POST status a prompt to enter initial
configuration will appear
• Can configure manually or with a System
Configuration dialog
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Starting the Switch
Viewing Initial Bootup Output from the Switch
Hardware Platform and Flash Information Displayed During Bootup
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Starting the Switch
Viewing Initial Bootup Output from the Switch
Hardware Platform and Flash Information Displayed During Bootup
(continued)
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Starting the Switch
Using the System Configuration Dialog
Using the System Configuration Dialog
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Starting the Switch
Using the System Configuration Dialog
Using the System Configuration Dialog (continued)
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Starting the Switch
Using the System Configuration Dialog
Option to Use
Config
Generated by
Setup
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Starting the Switch
Logging on with the Switch CLI and Using the Help Facility
• The Cisco IOS software provides a CLI
called the EXEC
– Interprets commands that are entered and
carries out corresponding operations
• Two levels of access to the EXEC:
– User mode: tasks indicating switch status
• Indicated by the > prompt
– Privileged mode: ability to change the
configuration of the switch
• Indicated by the # prompt
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Starting the Switch
Logging on with the Switch CLI and Using the Help Facility
• To change from user EXEC mode to
privileged EXEC mode, use the enable
command
– Switch will prompt for the enable password if
one is configured
• Password is not shown on screen as you type
• If configuring switch over a network via a modem
or Telnet, password is sent in clear text
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Starting the Switch
Logging on with the Switch CLI and Using the Help Facility
• Privileged EXEC mode includes all commands
from user EXEC mode, plus all the configuration
commands
– The configure command allows access to other
command modes
• Several types of command-line help:
– Context-sensitive help: a list of commands and
arguments associated with a specific command
– Console error messages: problems with commands
that are entered incorrectly
– Command history buffer: recall of long or complex
commands to be altered or corrected
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Starting the Switch
Logging on with the Switch CLI and Using the Help Facility
• The question mark (?) can be used to get help
– Two types of context-sensitive help with the ?
command:
• Word help: Enter the ? command to get word help
for a list of commands that begin with a particular
character sequence; do not use a space before the
question mark
• Command syntax help: Enter the ? command to
see how to complete a command; enter a question
mark in place of a keyword or argument; use a
space before the question mark
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
• Catalyst 2950 switches come with this default
configuration:
– IP address: 0.0.0.0
– CDP: Enabled
– 100BASE-T port: Autonegotiate duplex mode
– Spanning tree: Enabled
– Console password: None
– Hostname: Switch
– No passwords set on virtual terminal (VTY)
lines
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
• The show running-config command displays the active
configuration on the switch
– Requires privileged EXEC mode access
Default Output for show running-config Command:
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
Default Output for show running-config Command (continued):
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
• The show interface f0/2 command
displays information about interface
FastEthernet 0/2
– Switch trunks and switch ports are both
considered interfaces
– Output varies, depending on the network for
which you have configured an interface
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
Default f0/2 Settings
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
Default f0/2 Settings (continued)
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
Nondefault f0/1
Settings
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
Fields in the show interface f0/1 Output of Previous Slide
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
• VLAN membership is displayed using the show
vlan command
• In default configuration, all ports are in VLAN 1
– VLAN 1 is the default management VLAN
• The flash directory has a file that contains the
IOS image, a file called env_vars, and a
subdirectory called html
• After switch configuration, two more files are
added to the flash directory: config.txt and a
VLAN database
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
Default Port VLAN Membership
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
Output of show flash
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
Verify IOS version and configuration register settings with
the show version command
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
Verify IOS version and configuration register settings with
the show version command (continued)
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Configuring the Switch
Catalyst Switch Default Configuration
Fields in the show version Output From Previous Slide
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Configuring the Switch
Basic Catalyst Switch Configuration
• Returning the Switch to Its Default Configuration:
– Delete the VLAN database file, vlan.dat from the
flash directory
– Erase the backup configuration file, startup-config
– Restart the switch with the reload command
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Configuring the Switch
Basic Catalyst Switch Configuration
• One of the first tasks in configuring a
switch is to name it
– Allows you to better manage the network by
uniquely identifying each switch
– The name of the switch is considered its
hostname
– The name is displayed at the system prompt
– The switch name is assigned in global
configuration mode
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Configuring the Switch
Basic Catalyst Switch Configuration
Configuring the Hostname and Line Passwords
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Configuring the Switch
Basic Catalyst Switch Configuration
• Assign an IP address to the switch
– Makes it possible to connect remotely using Telnet or
a web browser
• VLAN 1 is assigned an IP address
– Use the no shutdown command to make the Switch
Virtual Interface (SVI), VLAN 1, operational
• Required if using Simple Network Management Protocol
(SNMP) to manage the switch
• Assign a default gateway to the switch using the
ip default-gateway command
– Allows access to other networks
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Configuring the Switch
Basic Catalyst Switch Configuration
Configuring the Switch for Management
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Configuring the Switch
Basic Catalyst Switch Configuration
• By default, VLAN 1 is the management VLAN
– Use it to manage all the network devices on a
network
– All ports belong to VLAN1
– Remove access ports from VLAN 1 and place them in
another VLAN
• Allows for VLAN management while keeping traffic from
network hosts off the management VLAN
– Use the no ip address configuration command to
remove an IP address for VLAN 1 or to disable IP
processing
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Configuring the Switch
Basic Catalyst Switch Configuration
• FastEthernet switch ports default to autospeed and auto-duplex
– Allows the interfaces to negotiate these
settings
– Can be manually configured
• A web browser can be used to configure
the switch if the switch has an http server
running on port 80
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Configuring the Switch
Basic Catalyst Switch Configuration
Configuring HTTP Support
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Configuring the Switch
Basic Catalyst Switch Configuration
• The Cisco Virtual Switch Manager (CVSM) is a webbased graphical user interface (GUI) used to configure
and monitor many Cisco switches such as the Catalyst
2950
– When the GUI is initialized by opening a browser with
the switch’s URL, an applet is downloaded to the
switch
• Another GUI, Cisco Network Assistant (CAN) is also
available, as is Cluster Management Suite (CMS)
• Special IOS images that include an additional HTML
package are required to make CVSM and CNA work with
switches
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Configuring the Switch
Duplex and Speed Configuration
• Half-duplex transmission mode
implements CSMA/CD
– Traditional shared LAN operates in halfduplex mode and is susceptible to collisions
• Full-duplex significantly improves network
performance without installing new cabling
– Can use point-to-point Ethernet, FastEthernet,
and Gigabit Ethernet connections
– Collision free connections
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Configuring the Switch
Duplex and Speed Configuration
• Full-duplex connections are point-to-point
between switches and nodes but not
between shared hubs
– Most NICs sold today offer full-duplex
capability
– In full-duplex mode, the collision detection
circuit is disabled
– Nodes that attach to hubs share their
connection to a switch port and must operate
in half-duplex mode
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Configuring the Switch
Duplex and Speed Configuration
• Standard shared Ethernet uses 5060% of the 10-Mbps bandwidth (5 to
6 Mbps)
• Full-duplex offers 100% of bandwidth
in both directions (10-Mbps transmit
and 10-Mbps receive for a total of 20
Mbps)
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Configuring the Switch
Duplex and Speed Configuration
• Operation of half-duplex versus fullduplex:
– Half-duplex relies on CSMA/CD
– Half-duplex supports only unidirectional
data flow
– Half-duplex has a higher potential for
collisions
– Half-duplex involves the use of hubs
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Configuring the Switch
Duplex and Speed Configuration
• Operation of half-duplex versus fullduplex (continued):
– Full-duplex is point-to-point
– Full-duplex requires full-duplex support
on both ends
– Full-duplex is collision free
– Full-duplex has the collision detection
circuit disabled
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Configuring the Switch
Duplex and Speed Configuration
• Use the duplex {auto | full | half}
interface configuration command to
specify the duplex mode of switch ports
– Set autonegotiation of duplex mode: auto
– Set full-duplex mode: full
– Set half-duplex mode: half
– For FastEthernet and 10/100/1000 ports, the
default is auto
– For 100BASE-FX, the default is full
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Configuring the Switch
Duplex and Speed Configuration
• Use the show interfaces command to verify
duplex settings
• Autonegotiation can cause problems
– Sometimes an attached device does not
support autonegotiation and is operating in full
duplex mode
• Necessary to manually configure the duplex mode
• Check for FCS errors with the show interfaces
command
– It is critical that the setting on the switch is
compatible with the setting on the NIC
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Configuring the Switch
Managing the MAC Address Table
• Switches use MAC address tables to forward
traffic between ports
– The tables include dynamic, permanent and
static addresses
• Dynamic addresses: source MAC addresses that
the switch learns and then drops when they are not
refreshed and time out
– Learned by examining the source MAC address of each
frame received on each port
– MAC address and port number are added to the MAC
address table
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Configuring the Switch
Managing the MAC Address Table
– The tables include dynamic, permanent
and static addresses (continued)
• Permanent addresses: assigned by an
administrator to a port
– Reasons for assigning permanent addresses:
» MAC address will not age out
» Must attach a server or user workstation to
a specific port and you know the MAC
address
» Enhanced security
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Configuring the Switch
Managing the MAC Address Table
• Maximum size of MAC address table
varies with different switches
– Catalyst 2950: 8192 MAC addresses
• When table is full, traffic for new MAC addresses is
flooded
• The show mac-address-table command,
entered in privileged EXEC mode, displays
the MAC addresses a switch has learned
• The clear mac-address-table command
purges dynamically learned entries
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Configuring the Switch
Managing the MAC Address Table
Viewing the MAC Address Table
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Configuring the Switch
Managing the MAC Address Table
Clearing Dynamic Entries in the MAC
Address Table
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Configuring the Switch
Managing the MAC Address Table
• The global configuration mode
command:
mac address-table static mac-addr vlan vlan-id interface interface-id
can be used to configure a static MAC
address for a switch
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Configuring the Switch
Managing the MAC Address Table
Statically Configuring a Port-to-MAC Mapping
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
• Port security features can be used to
restrict input on an interface
– Limit and identify the MAC addresses of the
stations allowed to access the port
– Switch will not forward frames with source
MAC addresses that are outside the group of
defined addresses
– Use the switchport port-security interface
command without keywords to enable port
security on an interface
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
• Port security features can be used to
restrict input on an interface (continued)
– Use the switchport port-security interface
command with keywords to configure a
secure MAC address, maximum number of
secure MAC addresses, or the violation mode
– Use the no form of this command to disable
port security or set the parameters to their
default state
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
Port Security Options
• Full syntax for switchport port-security interface
mode command:
switchport port-security [mac-address mac-address]
| [mac-address sticky [mac-address]] | [maximum
value] | [violation {protect | restrict | shutdown}]
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
• A port must be in access mode to enable port
security, and port security is disabled by default
• Methods by which secure addresses can be
added to the table after the maximum number of
allowed MAC addresses is set:
– Manually configure all the addresses
– Allow the port to dynamically configure all the
addresses
– Configure some MAC addresses and allow
the rest to be dynamically learned
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
• An interface can be configured to convert
dynamic MAC addresses to sticky secure
AMC addresses and add them to the
running configuration by enabling sticky
learning:
– Enter the switchport port-security macaddress sticky interface configuration
command
• Converts all dynamically learned addresses
to sticky secure addresses
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
• Sticky MAC addresses do not automatically
become part of the configuration file
– Must save the configuration file or the addresses will
have to be learned the next time the switch is
restarted
– Disabling sticky learning converts the sticky secure
MAC addresses to dynamic secure addresses and
they are removed from the configuration file
– A secure port can have from 1 to 132 associated
secure addresses; no more than 1024 on the switch
total
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
• Security violation situations:
– Maximum number of secure MAC addresses
has been added to the address table, and a
station whose MAC address is not in the table
attempts to access the interface
– An address learned or configured on one
secure interface is seen on another secure
interface in the same VLAN
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
Port
Security
Keyword
Options
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
• An address violation occurs when:
– A secured port receives an address that has
been assigned to another secured port
– A port tries to learn an address that exceeds
its address table size limit
• Set with the switchport port-security maximum
command
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
Configuring Port Security
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
show port security Keyword Options
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
• Use the show port-security address command to
display MAC addresses for all ports
• Use the show port-security command without
keywords to display the port security settings for the
switch
Verifying Port Security
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
Verifying Port Security (continued)
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Configuring the Switch
Configuring Port Security
Verifying Port Security (continued)
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Configuring the Switch
Executing Adds, Moves, and Changes
• To add a new MAC address on an access switch
that connects a workstation to the network:
– Configure port security
– Configure the MAC address to the port allocated for
the new interface so that the first MAC address on the
port is the only address permitted
• To delete a MAC address on an access switch
that connects a workstation to the network,
remove the MAC address restrictions from the
port
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Configuring the Switch
Executing Adds, Moves, and Changes
• To move a MAC address from one access switch
to another:
– Add the MAC address to the new physical port
– On the new access switch, configure port security
– On the new access switch, configure the MAC
address to the port allocated for the new user
– When all security is in place in the new location, shut
down the old port and remove any MAC restrictions;
remove any old access lists from the original access
switch
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Configuring the Switch
Executing Adds, Moves, and Changes
• If an Ethernet NIC fails, installing a new
NIC changes the MAC address of the
workstation
– With port security, the new NIC doesn’t have
connectivity because of the now-incorrect
MAC address
– Remove the old MAC address from the
security on the port and add the new MAC
address
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Configuring the Switch
Executing Adds, Moves, and Changes
• To add a new switch to a network:
– Configure the switch name, IP address, and default
gateway
– Configure administrative access for console, auxiliary,
and VTY interfaces as appropriate
– Configure security for the device (user EXEC and
privileged EXEC levels)
– Configure access switch ports as necessary
– To ensure the switch does not become root of the
spanning tree, increase the priority value
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Configuring the Switch
Managing Switch Configuration Files
• The switch configuration file is erased with the
erase startup-config privileged EXEC
command
– Clears non-volatile RAM (NVRAM): RAM that retains
its memory when powered off
• Back up the most current configuration file on a
server or disc
– Essential for documentation
– On Catalyst 2950 use the copy nvram:startupconfig tftp command to upload the configuration file
to a TFTP server
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Configuring the Switch
Managing Switch Configuration Files
• Steps to upload a configuration file from a switch to a TFTP
server:
– Verify the TFTP server is accessible (ping it) and properly configured
– Log in to the switch through a console port or Telnet session
– Upload the switch configuration to the TFTP server, using the IP
address or hostname of the TFTP server and the destination filename
• Use one of these commands:
copy system:running-config tftp:[[[//location]/directory]/filename]
copy nvram:startup-config tftp:[[[//location]/directory]/filename]
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Configuring the Switch
Managing Switch Configuration Files
Saving Configuration Files
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Configuring the Switch
Password Recovery
• For security and management purposes,
passwords must be set on console and VTY
lines
– Assures only authorized access
• Sometimes you have physical access to a
switch but don’t know the password
– Follow the password recovery procedures such as:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/switches/ps6
28/prod_password_recoveries_list.html
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Configuring the Switch
Upgrading the Cisco IOS Image
• IOS images are replaced because:
– Bugs are fixed
– New features are made available
– Performance improvements are made
• If the network can be made more secure or to
operate more efficiently, upgrade the IOS
• To upgrade, log on to cisco.com and download
a copy of the new image to your local TFPT
server
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Summary
• Switches are similar to routers
– Have basic computers components such as CPUs,
RAM, and an operating system
– Ports are used to connect hosts and for
management
– LEDs on the front of the switch show system status,
RPS, port mode and port status
– When powered on, a switch performs a POST
automatically to verify that it functions correctly
– Use HyperTerminal to configure or check the status
of a switch
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Summary
• Switches are similar to routers (continued)
– Switches use a CLI
– A question mark (?) is used to access help
• Word help and syntax help are available
– Command modes:
• User EXEC mode
– Prompt is a greater-than character (>)
• Privileged EXEC mode
– Prompt is a pound character (#)
• Password protect both modes
• The configure command allows use of other command
modes
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Summary
• Switches use default data when powered
up the first time
– show running-config and show interfaces
display the factory default settings
– Assign an IP address for management
purposes
– The show version command verifies the
IOS version and the configuration register
settings
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Summary
• After an IP address and default gateway are
configured, a switch can be accessed with a
web-based interface on port 80, if the http
server has been enabled on the switch
• The duplex command is used to configure
interface duplex options
• Troubleshooting issues with switches usually
pertain to speed or duplex misconfigurations
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Summary
• A switch dynamically learns and
maintains thousands of MAC addresses
– If frames associated with a previously
learned MAC address are not received, they
are automatically aged out or discarded after
300 seconds
– The command clear mac-address-table will
manually clear address tables
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Summary
• A MAC address permanently assigned to an
interface will not age out
– Security will be enhanced
• To configure a static MAC address:
mac address-table static mac-addr vlan vlan-id interface interface-id
– Use the no form of the command to remove it
• Port security provides a basic level of
security
– Restricts access based on MAC address or allowable
maximum number of MAC addresses
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Summary
• To verify port security, use these commands:
– show port security
– show port security address
– show port security interface
• On a new switch added to a network, configure:
– Switch name
– IP address and default gateway
– Line passwords
• When you move a switch or host from one port to another,
remove configurations that can cause unexpected behavior
• Maintain documentation and do backups to a server
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