On 07/07/2011 17:30, Les Mikesell wrote:
Old Cisco switches - and Cisco's advice about how to work around their problems - are just the main reason that anyone would ever have turned off auto-negotiate. And it is a big problem if you only turn if off at one end which is what you end up with as you start to change equipment, because the other end will always get it wrong. These days, if a device doesn't negotiate properly you should probably just replace it.

The problem is not the auto-negotiation iteself, but the fact that if one side hard codes its speed to 100-Full Duplex then the other side cannot auto-negotiate to 100-Full Duplex. It also needs to be hard-coded to 100-Full duplex - The auto-negotiation is not a "I'll do what you're set to" type protocol, but a "let's see what's best for us" protocol.

There was actually never any problem with auto-negotiation itself - it did exactly what it said on the box, just that it didn't work if either end turned it off and hard coded it's speed.

Having seen my fair share of performance problems, if you don't have console access to both interfaces then agree on the speed and duplex and hard code it - saves a lot of faffing about and almost always works a treat.

--
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Giles Coochey
NetSecSpec Ltd
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