Нашел видео по конфигурированию IP-адреса на свитче HP ProCurve 2510-24, оно короткое но вполне дает представление о том что и в какой последовательности делать.
И тут еще не большая статья на английском языке
- Connect the console port of the switch to the serial port of a PC using the black ProCurve cable. This cable has an RJ45 on one end and a DB9 on the other. Don't confuse it with the similar-looking cable that comes with some UPSs. Open a terminal emulator program and set the serial port to 9600-8N1.
- Hit
Enter
several times. It will say, "ProCurve Switch 2510G-48#." - Defaults
- Default username = (none).
- Default password = procurve
- Change the following parameters:
- Community name public
- Set manager username and password.
- Set default gateway for your network.
- IP Configuration - set to manual and assign a static IP and netmask.
IMPORTANT: The Procurve must have an IP or it will broadcast for a lease.
- Browser interface - good for a quick overview but causes your browser to hang.
- Telnet interface - more powerful and has additional features.
After logging in, enter the following two commands:- enable
- menu
- IP authorized managers - enter the IP address of the computer that is allowed to telnet to the switch.
- Network monitoring - This allows you to set up one of
the ports on the switch to monitor any combination of other ports.
All packets on the ports being monitored are copied to the monitoring
port. This is useful for security monitoring. To enable monitoring,
set the following using the command-line interface:
- Monitoring enabled: yes
- Monitoring port: 15 (for example)
- Monitor ports: 1-14 and 16-24 (for a 24-port switch). Press space bar to activate monitoring for each port except the monitoring port (15 in this example). This port must be left blank.
Problems
An unconfigured ProCurve will broadcast for a lease continuously until it finds a DHCP server. If your DHCP server requires the MAC address of the client before it will issue a lease, your logs will fill up with messages like the following, repeated every ten seconds:
dhcpd: DHCPDISCOVER from 00:21:f7:9e:82:40 via eth1
dhcpd: DHCPOFFER on 192.168.40.248 to 00:21:f7:9e:82:40 via eth1
dhcpd: DHCPREQUEST for 192.168.40.248 (192.168.40.1) from 00:21:f7:9e:82:40 via eth1
dhcpd: DHCPACK on 192.168.40.248 to 00:21:f7:9e:82:40 via eth1
If you don't have a record of the switch's MAC address, these messages can seem quite mysterious.
A similar problem can also occur if you have bridging activated on a server. If the file
/etc/sysconfig/network/ifcfg-eth0
contains
the following two lines:
BRIDGE='yes'
BRIDGE_PORTS='eth0 eth1'
it means bridging is activated, and eth0 will ask for an IP on eth1 even if
it already has one. This can be tricky to track down. Believe it or not, there
are people who have bridging turned on and don't know it. The following lines
show up in your log:
dhcpd: DHCPREQUEST for 192.168.40.248 (192.168.40.1) from 00:b0:d0:19:5a:d3 via eth1: unknown lease 192.168.40.248
.
Адрес исходной статьи: http://randombio.com/linuxsetup111.html
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