6.5.1

Table Of Contents
6 In the Destinations section, edit the destinations for the port mirroring session.
Depending on the type of port mirroring session being edited, different options are available for
configuration.
Option Description
Select a destination distributed port Click the Select distributed ports… button to select ports from a list, or click the
Add distributed ports… button to add ports by port number. You can add more
than one distributed port.
Select a uplinks Select an available uplink from the list and click Add > to add the uplink to the
port mirroring session. You can select more than one uplink.
Select ports or uplinks Click the Select distributed ports… button to select ports from a list, or click the
Add distributed ports… button to add ports by port number. You can add more
than one distributed port.
Click theAdd uplinks... button to add uplinks as the destination. Select uplinks
from the list and click OK.
Specify IP address Click the Add button. A new list entry is created. Select the entry and either click
the Edit button to enter the IP address, or click directly into the IP Address field
and enter the IP address. A warning dialog opens if the IP address is invalid.
7 Click OK.
vSphere Distributed Switch Health Check
The health check support in vSphere Distributed Switch 5.1 and later helps you identify and troubleshoot
configuration errors in a vSphere Distributed Switch.
vSphere runs regular health checks to examine certain settings on the distributed and physical switches
to identify common errors in the networking configuration. The default interval between two health checks
is 1 minute.
Important Depending on the options that you select, vSphere Distributed Switch Health Check can
generate a significant number of MAC addresses for testing teaming policy, MTU size, VLAN
configuration, resulting in extra network traffic. For more information, see Network health check feature
limitations in vSphere 5.1 and 5.5 (2034795). After you disable vSphere Distributed Switch Health Check,
the generated MAC addresses age out of your physical network environment according to your network
policy.
vSphere Networking
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