Motorola WiNG 5.5 Reference Manual page 815

Table of Contents

Advertisement

The
Traffic
table displays the following:
Good Octets Sent
Good Octets Received
Good Packets Sent
Good Packets Received
Mcast Pkts Sent
Mcast Pkts Received
Ucast Pkts Sent
Ucast Pkts Received
Bcast Pkts Sent
Bcast Pkts Received
Packet Fragments
Jabber Pkts
The
Errors
table displays the following:
Bad Pkts Received
Collisions
Late Collisions
Excessive Collisions
Drop Events
Tx Undersize Pkts
Oversize Pkts
MAC Transmit Error
MAC Receive Error
Bad CRC
Displays the number of octets (bytes) with no errors sent by the interface.
Displays the number of octets (bytes) with no errors received by the interface.
Displays the number of good packets transmitted.
Displays the number of good packets received.
Displays the number of multicast packets sent through the interface.
Displays the number of multicast packets received through the interface.
Displays the number of unicast packets sent through the interface.
Displays the number of unicast packets received through the interface.
Displays the number of broadcast packets sent through the interface.
Displays the number of broadcast packets received through the interface.
Displays the number of packet fragments transmitted or received through the interface.
Displays the number of packets transmitted through the interface larger than the MTU.
Displays the number of bad packets received through the interface.
Displays the number of collisions over the selected interface.
A late collision is any collision that occurs after the first 64 octets of data have been sent.
Late collisions are not normal, and usually the result of out of specification cabling or a
malfunctioning device.
Displays the number of excessive collisions. Excessive collisions occur when the traffic
load increases to the point a single Ethernet network cannot handle it efficiently.
Displays the number of dropped packets transmitted or received through the interface.
Displays the number of undersized packets transmitted through the interface.
Displays the number of oversized packets transmitted through the interface.
Displays the number of failed transmits due to an internal MAC sublayer error (that's not
a late collision), due to excessive collisions or a carrier sense error.
Displays the number of received packets that failed due to an internal MAC sublayer
(that's not a late collision), an excessive number of collisions or a carrier sense error.
Displays the CRC error. The CRC is the 4 byte field at the end of every frame. The receiving
station uses it to interpret if the frame is valid. If the CRC value computed by the interface
does not match the value at the end of frame, it is considered as a bad CRC.
Statistics 13 - 77

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents