From: Kenneth Wygand (KWygand@customonline.com)
Date: Mon Jan 05 2004 - 15:41:38 GMT-3
Hello everyone and Happy New Year -
I have about 20 switches set up as a flat network with no VLANs
(10.0.0.0). Different device groups all have a common second octet
(clients are 10.0.x.x, printers are 10.1.x.x, servers are 10.2.x.x) but
the network is flat, as they all use a /8 (255.0.0.0) mask. The
printers, for example, are scattered across all switches but have
10.1.x.x addresses. I need to find out what physical ports each printer
is plugged into. I have ping-swept the 10.1.x.x range and found about
150 printers total. However, I need to now find out what switch port
each printer connects to (actually all I need to know is which switch,
not necessarily which port).
I know I can just enable CDP on the switch and sniff the actual drop
that each printer is connected to and analyze the advertised information
from the switch to determine where each printer is located, but 150
printers is too many to do this on. Is there any easier way to
determine which switch each printer connects to? I'm thinking it has to
employ some layer-2 technology, but since the network is flat, the ARP
table will only reside on layer-3 devices (of which the switches are
not).
The network is entirely Cat3550 switches running SMI images.
Any suggestions are greatly appreciated! Thanks!
Kenneth E. Wygand
Systems Engineer, Project Services
CISSP #37102, CCNP, CCDP, ACSP, Cisco IPT Design Specialist, MCP, CNA,
Network+, A+
Custom Computer Specialists, Inc.
"Treat your password as you do your toothbrush; change it every six
months and don't let anyone else use it."
-Anonymous
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