Differences between version 4 and predecessor to the previous major change of EthernetSwitch.
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Newer page: | version 4 | Last edited on Tuesday, March 9, 2004 1:09:33 pm | by CraigMckenna | Revert |
Older page: | version 3 | Last edited on Sunday, March 7, 2004 3:59:24 pm | by JohnMcPherson | Revert |
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-An ethernet switch has a number of ethernet ports, usually [10baseT
], [100baseT
], and [1000baseT
]. A switch receives ethernet frames on every port and based on the destination MAC address, forwards them out another port. Switches of these type tend to be store-and-forward devices, receiving the entire frame and doing a lookup against the MAC table for destination ports.
+An ethernet switch has a number of ethernet ports, usually [10BaseT
], [100BaseT
], and [1000BaseT
]. A switch receives ethernet frames on every port and based on the destination MAC address, forwards them out another port. Switches of these type tend to be store-and-forward devices, receiving the entire frame and doing a lookup against the MAC table for destination ports.
The MAC table is updated on reception of packets from a source [MAC] address, for each MAC address an entry in that ports MAC forwarding table is added.