Installation guide
Table Of Contents
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: Initial Configuration
- Chapter 3: Configuring the Switch
- Using the Web Interface
- Navigating the Web Browser Interface
- Web Configuration
- Displaying Status Overview
- Showing Port Statistics
- Displaying the System Name
- Setting the Switch’s IP Address
- Configuring the Logon Password
- Tools
- Register Product
- Port Configuration
- Storm Control
- Port Mirroring
- Cable Diagnostic
- Trunk Membership
- Trunk Configuration
- LACP Setup
- LACP Status
- Configuring VLAN Groups
- 802.1X
- LLDP Settings
- LLDP Neighbor Table
- RSTP
- QoS Settings
- SNMP
- PoE
- Appendix A: Software Specifications
- Appendix B: Troubleshooting

Configuring the Switch
3-18
Port Mirroring
You can mirror traffic from any source port to a target port for real-time analysis. You
can then attach a logic analyzer or RMON probe to the target port and study the
traffic crossing the source port in a completely unobtrusive manner.
Field Attributes
• Port to Mirror to – The port that will “duplicate” or “mirror” the traffic on the source
port. Only incoming packets can be mirrored. Packets will be dropped when the
available egress bandwidth is less than ingress bandwidth.
• Ports to Mirror – Select the ports that you want to mirror from this section of the
page. A port will be mirrored when the “Mirroring Enabled” check-box is checked.
Note:
If the total ingress bandwidth exceeds the mirror port’s egress bandwidth, packets
will eventually be dropped on ingress to the switch, which means they will not
reach the mirror port or their intended destination port. Input rate-limiting in
conjunction with port flow-control should be used to ensure that the total ingress
bandwidth never exceeds the egress bandwidth.
Web – Click PORTS, Port Mirroring.
Figure 3-15 Port Mirroring