I would chk the device connecting to this port to see if it is registering any frame loss or TX drops. If so this could be a Layer 1 issue with dirty connections or just a misconfig of what one end sees for advertisement of port speed.

On 6/15/19 9:15 AM, Ken Hohhof wrote:

I feel stupid for asking this, but can someone explain to me what the Rx Fragment count means in Ethernet interface statistics?  The usual online resources are not helping much in this case.

I have an RB4011 with 2 spare Ethernet ports bridged so that I can monitor the traffic between a customer’s internal network and a private PTP microwave link to their other building.  The Mikrotik is not doing any layer 3 processing on these ports, and would not be able to reassemble IP fragments, but what is it using to determine that packets are “fragments”?

The fragment count incoming from the customer’s Dell switch is around 25% of the total packet count according to the Mikrotik stats.  That number seems alarmingly high.  The customer is not complaining about any issues related to this.  Does this just mean the Dell switch is fragmenting jumbo frames to go over the Ethernet interface, and this is totally normal?  The customer does have fiber between the various switches in their building.

Or do I have some kind of a configuration problem?  The settings on the Mikrotik interface are MTU=1500, L2 MTU=1592, Max L2 MTU=9578.



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