Hi Mike,

thanks for your answer. Does that mean that if a shut/no shut doesn't result 
in an up/down, there definitely IS a problem with either the cabling OR the 
switch port ? For now that is all I need to know...
Thanks for your help in advance.

Regards,

Hans


>From: "Michael" 
>Reply-To: "Michael" 
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: RE: Switch port failure on 3548 [7:15089]
>Date: Tue, 7 Aug 2001 09:27:36 -0400
>
>Herr Stout,
>
>Another easy way of determining if the problem is with the port or the
>cable would be to plug both ends of the cat 5 cable(s) into a cable
>tester.  The manner Mike proposes is legit but I would want to
>positively know that all pairs are 100%. Once you certify the cable as
>being good, then the port would probably be the problem.  Hopefully it
>will be the cable...helluva lot cheaper!
>
>-Michael Vaughan
>Senior Network Engineer
>Predator-Hunter.com Inc.
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>       -----Original Message-----
>       From: Mike Mandulak
>       Sent: Tue 8/7/2001 8:52 AM
>       To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>       Cc:
>       Subject: Re: Switch port failure on 3548 [7:15089]
>
>
>
>       The only way I can think that it would be a cable problem is if
>there was a
>       short in the wire somewhere. Unplug the CAT5 from the suspect
>port, do a
>       shut/no shut do you get the same result? Better still plug a PC
>into the
>       port, does it stay up/up? Then plug a PC in another port with an
>FTP server
>       on it and do some file transfers, then check for errors.
>
>       MikeM
>
>       ----- Original Message -----
>       From: "Hans Stout"
>       To:
>       Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2001 7:51 AM
>       Subject: Switch port failure on 3548 [7:15089]
>
>
>       > Hello colleagues,
>       >
>       > I have a Cisco 3548 switch and I suspect that one of the
>switch ports is
>       not
>       > working. All 48 ports have a CAT5 cable connection, and all
>ports are
>       > patched to the respective wall outlets, there are no active
>users yet, so
>       > all the ports are down/down. When I do a shut/no shut on all
>the ports, I
>       > can see in the log that all ports except one show that the
>port goes up
>       and
>       > then down. To my best knowledge, the fact that the port goes
>up/down after
>       a
>       > shut/no shut shows that the port is ok. The port that doesn't
>work goes
>       down
>       > right away. My question is: does this mean that the actual
>physical switch
>       > port is defective, or that the CAT5 cable attached to the
>switch isn't
>       > working, or that something on the path from the switch port to
>the wall
>       > outlet isn't working ?
>       > Thanks for your help in advance !
>       >
>       > Regards,
>       > Hans
>       >
>       >
>_________________________________________________________________
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