08-09-2004 12:46 AM - edited 03-02-2019 05:37 PM
Hi,
I've had a couple of instances where ports have discovered additional MAC addreses and been disabled, as they should, but workstations/NICs on the ports have not been changed.
2 MAC addresses have come up which I don't recognised, they are:
30-1c-08-00-45-00 - which I can't relate to any manufacturer, any idea how this got here?
and:
00-00-0c-07-ac-7b - which is a Cisco MAC. How could this happen, there's never been anything Cisco based on this port. This has happened on a couple of ports and I've had to allow 2 MAC entries for these ports.
There is probably a simple answer to this, but it's a mystery to me!
Dave
08-09-2004 03:49 AM
Hi David,
00-00-0c-07-ac-7b is HSRP`s virtual MAC addr. of group no. 123 (7b in HEX.) the ports which have discovered this MAC must be uplinked to routers where HSRP is running.
I dont understand the other MAC address, kindly check it its correct mac u have captured and on which ports you r getting this.
08-09-2004 03:58 AM
I copied and pasted the 30... MAC address from the Catalyst show command. Do you think this could be the result of a malformed frame?
The port where the HSRP multicast is logged is an access port. I guess the HSRP frame is going out of the port but shouldn't be coming back?
08-09-2004 04:15 AM
the unknown MAC could be due to malformed frame and HSRPs MAC address shouldn`t be logged under a port`s membership.
Just check the logs, r there any flappings reported, or any HSRP events. It seems that access port has learnt its own burnt-in MAC and HSRP`s MAC.
Just cehck the mac addres table and do u see any loops or address re-learning.
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