Hans,
The easiest way to troubleshoot this is issue is by connecting a "Known
Good" laptop/desktop directly into the switch port. I would also suggest
enabling portfast on the switch ports connecting to host stations (ie
workstation, servers, and printers).
Regards
-Original Message-
F
l"
>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 bot
.
- Original Message -
From: "Michael"
To: "Mike Mandulak" ;
Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2001 9:19 AM
Subject: RE: Switch port failure on 3548 [7:15089]
> Herr Stout,
>
> Another easy way of determining if the problem is with the port or the
> cable would be to plug both e
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
help.
Regards,
Hans
>From: Mike Mandulak
>To: Hans Stout , [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: Switch port failure on 3548 [7:15089]
>Date: Tue, 07 Aug 2001 07:44:33 -0400
>
>The only way I can think that it would be a cable problem is if there was a
>short in the wire somewhere.
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
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