Lldp; General Lldp Operation; Lldp-Med - HP Aruba JL253A Management And Configuration Manual

For arubaos-switch 16.08
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Severity: - Info.

LLDP

To standardize device discovery on all switches, LLDP is implemented while offering limited read-only support for
CDP, as documented in this manual. For the latest information on your switch model, consult the Release Notes
(available on the HPE Networking website). If LLDP has not yet been implemented (or if you are running an older
version of software), consult a previous version of the Management and Configuration Guide for device discovery
details.
LLDP (Link Layer Discovery Protocol): provides a standards-based method for enabling the switches covered
in this guide to advertise themselves to adjacent devices and to learn about adjacent LLDP devices.
LLDP-MED (LLDP Media Endpoint Discovery): Provides an extension to LLDP and is designed to support VoIP
deployments.
NOTE: LLDP-MED is an extension for LLDP, and the switch requires that LLDP be enabled as a
prerequisite to LLDP-MED operation.
An SNMP utility can progressively discover LLDP devices in a network by:
Procedure
1. Reading a given device's Neighbors table (in the Management Information Base, or MIB) to learn about other,
neighboring LLDP devices.
2. Using the information learned in step 1 to find and read the neighbor devices' Neighbors tables to learn about
additional devices, and so on.
Also, by using show commands to access the switch's neighbor database for information collected by an
individual switch, system administrators can learn about other devices connected to the switch, including device
type (capability) and some configuration information. In VoIP deployments using LLDP-MED on the switches,
additional support unique to VoIP applications is also available. See LLDP-MED (media-endpoint-discovery) on
page 233.

General LLDP operation

An LLDP packet contains data about the transmitting switch and port. The switch advertises itself to adjacent
(neighbor) devices by transmitting LLDP data packets out all ports on which outbound LLDP is enabled and by
reading LLDP advertisements from neighbor devices on ports that are inbound LLDP-enabled. (LLDP is a one-
way protocol and does not include any acknowledgement mechanism.) An LLDP-enabled port receiving LLDP
packets inbound from neighbor devices stores the packet data in a Neighbor database (MIB).

LLDP-MED

This capability is an extension to LLDP and is available on the switches. See LLDP-MED (media-endpoint-
discovery) on page 233.
218
Aruba 2930F / 2930M Management and Configuration Guide
for ArubaOS-Switch 16.08

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents