6.7

Table Of Contents
5 (Optional) On the Security page, use the drop-down menus to edit the security exceptions and click
Next.
Option Description
Promiscuous mode
n
Reject. Placing a guest adapter in promiscuous mode has no effect on which
frames are received by the adapter.
n
Accept. Placing a guest adapter in promiscuous mode causes it to detect all
frames passed on the vSphere Distributed Switch that are allowed under the
VLAN policy for the port group that the adapter is connected to.
MAC address changes
n
Reject. If set to Reject and the guest operating system changes the MAC
address of the adapter to anything other than what is in the .vmx
configuration file, all inbound frames are dropped.
If the Guest OS changes the MAC address back to match the MAC address
in the .vmx configuration file, inbound frames are passed again.
n
Accept. Changing the MAC address from the Guest OS has the intended
effect. Frames to the new MAC address are received.
Forged transmits
n
Reject. Any outbound frame with a source MAC address that is different from
the one currently set on the adapter are dropped.
n
Accept. No filtering is performed and all outbound frames are passed.
6 (Optional) On the Traffic shaping page, use the drop-down menus to enable or disable Ingress or
Egress traffic shaping and click Next.
Option Description
Status If you enable either Ingress traffic shaping or Egress traffic shaping, you are
setting limits on the amount of networking bandwidth allocated for each VMkernel
adapter or virtual network adapter associated with this port group. If you disable
the policy, services have a free, clear connection to the physical network by
default.
Average bandwidth Establishes the number of bits per second to allow across a port, averaged over
time, that is, the allowed average load.
Peak bandwidth The maximum number of bits per second to allow across a port when it is sending
or receiving a burst of traffic. This maximum number tops the bandwidth used by
a port whenever it is using its burst bonus.
Burst size The maximum number of bytes to allow in a burst. If this parameter is set, a port
might gain a burst bonus when it does not use all its allocated bandwidth.
Whenever the port needs more bandwidth than specified by Average bandwidth,
it might be allowed to transmit data at a higher speed if a burst bonus is available.
This parameter tops the number of bytes that can be accumulated in the burst
bonus and transferred at a higher speed.
7 (Optional) On the VLAN page, use the drop-down menus to edit the VLAN policy and click Next.
Option Description
None Do not use VLAN.
VLAN In the VLAN ID field, enter a number between 1 and 4094.
VLAN trunking Enter a VLAN trunk range.
Private VLAN Select an available private VLAN to use.
vSphere Networking
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