Reference Guide

Ports 297
Destination Port Restrictions
The following restrictions apply to destination ports:
Destination
ports cannot be configured as source ports.
Destination
ports cannot be a member of a LAG.
IP interfaces cannot be configured on the
destination
port.
GVRP cannot be enabled on the
destination
port.
•The
destination
port cannot be a member of a VLAN.
•Only one
destination
port can be defined.
All QoS/CoS rules that apply to the
destination
port, as an egress, such as
traffic shaping, are suspended for the duration of the mirroring session.
Any such settings, configured on the port during the mirroring session,
take effect only after the port is no longer a
destination
port for a
mirroring session.
Ingress mirrored packets may arrive at the ingress port either with an
802.1q tag or without. When the packets are mirrored to a port analyzer,
they should be transmitted as they are received on the ingress port.
However, in the device, the packet is transmitted out of the port analyzer
as always tagged or always untagged (user configurable), regardless of the
input encapsulation.
Source Port Restrictions
The following restrictions apply to ports specified as source ports:
Source ports cannot be a member of a LAG.
Source ports cannot be configured as a destination port.
Up to eight source ports can be mirrored
.
NOTE: When a port is set to be a target port for a port-mirroring session, all
normal operations on it are suspended. This includes Spanning Tree and LACP. All
currently active protocols and services on that port are suspended.