EasyManuals Logo

Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series Administration Guide

Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series
1814 pages
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Page #865 background imageLoading...
Page #865 background image
35-3
Software Configuration Guide—Release IOS XE 3.5.0E and IOS 15.2(1)E
OL_28731-01
Chapter 35 Configuring Cisco Express Forwarding
Catalyst 4500 Series Switch Implementation of CEF
Adjacency Types That Require Special Handling
In addition to adjacencies for next-hop interfaces (host-route adjacencies), other types of adjacencies are
used to expedite switching when certain exception conditions exist. When the prefix is defined, prefixes
requiring exception processing are cached with one of the special adjacencies listed in Table 35-1.
Unresolved Adjacency
When a link-layer header is prepended to packets, FIB requires the prepend to point to an adjacency
corresponding to the next hop. If an adjacency was created by FIB and was not discovered through a
mechanism such as ARP, the Layer 2 addressing information is not known and the adjacency is
considered incomplete. When the Layer 2 information is known, the packet is forwarded to the route
processor, and the adjacency is determined through ARP.
Catalyst 4500 Series Switch Implementation of CEF
Catalyst 4500 series switches support an ASIC-based integrated switching engine that provides these
features:
• Ethernet bridging at Layer 2
• IP routing at Layer 3
Because the ASIC is specifically designed to forward packets, the integrated switching engine hardware
can run this process much faster than CPU subsystem software.
Figure 35-1 shows a high-level view of the ASIC-based Layer 2 and Layer 3 switching process on the
integrated switching engine.
Table 35-1 Adjacency Types for Exception Processing
Adjacency Type Processing Method
Null adjacency Packets destined for a Null0 interface are dropped. A Null0 interface can
be used as an effective form of access filtering.
Glean adjacency When a router is connected directly to several hosts, the FIB table on the
router maintains a prefix for the subnet rather than for each individual
host. The subnet prefix points to a glean adjacency. When packets must
be forwarded to a specific host, the adjacency database is gleaned for the
specific prefix.
Punt adjacency Features that require special handling or features that are not yet
supported by CEF switching are sent (punted) to the next higher
switching level.
Discard adjacency Packets are discarded.
Drop adjacency Packets are dropped.

Table of Contents

Other manuals for Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series

Questions and Answers:

Question and Answer IconNeed help?

Do you have a question about the Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series and is the answer not in the manual?

Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series Specifications

General IconGeneral
SeriesCatalyst 4500 Series
CategorySwitch
Layer SupportLayer 2, Layer 3
Form FactorModular chassis
StackableNo
Chassis Slots3, 6, 7, 10
Power Supply OptionsAC, DC
RedundancyPower supply, Supervisor engine
Network ManagementCisco IOS Software CLI, SNMP, Cisco Prime Infrastructure
FeaturesSecurity, QoS
Port DensityUp to 384 ports per chassis
Security Features802.1X, ACLs, DHCP Snooping, Dynamic ARP Inspection, IP Source Guard
Supervisor Engine8-E

Related product manuals