Troubleshooting; Basic Troubleshooting Tips - HP Aruba 3810M Series Installation And Getting Started Manual

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5 Troubleshooting

This chapter describes how to troubleshoot your switch. This document describes troubleshooting
mostly from a hardware perspective. You can perform more in-depth troubleshooting on the
switch using the software tools available with the switch, including the full-featured console
interface, the built-in web browser interface, and IMC, the SNMP-based network management
tool. For more information, see the chapter "Troubleshooting" in the 3810M Management and
Configuration Guide, which is on the Hewlett Packard Enterprise website at
networking/support. You may want to bookmark this Web page for easy access in the future.
This chapter describes the following:
Basic Troubleshooting Tips (see
Diagnosing with the LEDs (see
Proactive Networking Tools (see
Hardware Diagnostic Tests (see
Restoring the Factory Default Configuration (see
Configuration" (page
Downloading New Switch Software (see
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Customer Support Services (see
Customer Support Services" (page

Basic Troubleshooting Tips

Most problems are caused by the following situations. Check for these items first when starting
your troubleshooting:
Connecting to devices that have a fixed full-duplex configuration. The RJ-45 ports are
configured as "Auto". That is, when connecting to attached devices, the switch will operate
in one of two ways to determine the link speed and the communication mode (half duplex
or full duplex):
If the connected device is also configured to Auto, the switch will automatically negotiate
both link speed and communication mode.
If the connected device has a fixed configuration, for example 100 Mbps, at half or full
duplex, the switch will automatically sense the link speed, but will default to a
communication mode of half duplex.
Because the switch behaves in this way (in compliance with the IEEE 802.3 standard), if a device
connected to the switch has a fixed configuration at full duplex, the device will not connect correctly
to the switch. The result will be high error rates and very inefficient communications between the
switch and the device.
Make sure that all the devices connected to the switch are configured to auto negotiate, or are
configured to speed and duplex settings matching those configured on the corresponding switch
port.
Faulty or loose cables. Look for loose or obviously faulty connections. If they appear to be
OK, make sure the connections are snug. If that does not correct the problem, try a different
cable.
Non-standard cables. Non-standard and miswired cables may cause network collisions
and other network problems, and can seriously impair network performance. Use a new
correctly-wired cable or compare your cable to the cable in appendix B, "Cables and
68
Troubleshooting
" Basic Troubleshooting Tips" (page
" Diagnosing with the LEDs" (page
" Proactive Networking" (page
" Hardware Diagnostic Tests" (page
78))
" Downloading New Switch Software" (page
79))
http://www.hpe.com/
68))
69))
76))
77))
" Restoring the Factory Default
"Hewlett Packard Enterprise
79))

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