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I've inherited a network spread out over a warehouse/front office consisting of approximately 50 desktop PCs, various servers, network printers, and routers/switches.
Network Map Algorithm that Detects Unmanaged Layer 2 Switches? Ask Question. I can run traditional network map tools (there are tons of these things) and it shows me the IP-based things in the network. But you have MAC - switch port mappings, on your managed ones, right? Switch Port Mapping. Download32 is source for switch port mapping shareware, freeware download - Managed Switch Port Mapping Tool, SoftPerfect Switch Port Mapper, SoftPerfect Switch Port Mapper, Free PacketTrap Switch Port Mapper, Free Network Config Generator, etc. May 13, 2016 Mapping Switch Ports. Is there a software onto a laptop where I can plug an Ethernet net cable from a switch to the laptop and the software can tell me which port of the switch the laptop is connected to. But there are many that will map the device for you. Switchport Map is a tool to automatically find, trace, and log used switch ports on a network as well as find relationships between switches. Switchport Map download SourceForge.net Connect.
Some of these software packages even automatically update your network topology map when new devices are added or removed from the network, which really cuts down on manually having to remove them yourself. Below you will find an Extensive list of the Top (some of which are FREE) Network Diagram Software packages available for download and trials.
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The 'intelligent' routers live in the server room. As the company has grown, we've annexed additional space and not very elegantly run various lengths of CAT5 thru the ceilings etc. I've been finding various hubs and switches in the ceilings -- none of which is labeled or documented in any way.
Wwe 2k12 download free. Of course, das blinken-lights tell me that someone is connected to these devices, I just have no way of finding out who.
I can run traditional network map tools (there are tons of these things) and it shows me the IP-based things in the network. That's nice, but information I already have. What I need to know is the network topology -- how the switches (bridges) are interconnected etc. And since they are off-the-shelf linksys unmanaged-types, they don't respond to SNMP so I can't use that..
What's the best/cheapest tool out there that I can use to analyze and detect things like hubs and switches in the network that don't respond to SNMP?
If there's no tool that you're aware of -- what generalized algorithm would you suggest to find this out? My guess would be that I could look at the MAC forward tables for the devices (switches, desktops, etc.) and build a chain that way, but I don't know if it's possible to get that from an unmanaged switch (let alone a hub).
(This patent has some neat ideas but I can't find any software built with it: http://www.freepatentsonline.com/6628623.html)
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Matt Rogish
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9 Answers
An idea could be to use a program like 3com network director trial version (or The Dude). Use it to discover all of your workstations and anything else with an IP address.
Wait for a quiet time and unplug each hub/switch .. you'll then at least begin to be able to make a map, the rest will be crawling about following cables. Network administration does mean getting dirty.
TubsTubs
You probably can't explicitly detect unmanaged devices.. but you have MAC -> switch port mappings, on your managed ones, right? If so, you should be able to infer the presence of unmanaged switches / hubs with more than one connected client -- I don't know how you'd find a port with only one.
- Record the MAC addresses of all smart switches and client devices
- Start from one of your known smart switches
- For each port on the switch, list the MAC addresses it's forwarding. If it lists one client, it's direct. If it's more than one and none of the addresses are in your known switch MACs, you've got a dumb switch. If it's more than one and one address is in your set of known switches, recurse on this switch.
You probably don't have any accidental loops in your network topology (or your network probably wouldn't work) so you can probably assume a tree structure outside your core.
NateNate2,77822 gold badges2323 silver badges3838 bronze badges
You could try to get spanning-tree protocol information out of the smart switches; even unmanaged switches have to participate in this protocol (this doesn't apply to hubs, though).
Alex DupuyAlex Dupuy5,08911 gold badge2828 silver badges3333 bronze badges
I don't think unmanaged switches/hubs will have arp entries - being transparent at the mac layer is their reason for existing.
And I don't think there's a way to get their MAC forwarding tables short of taking them apart and finding a JTAG or other port to talk to them with, which is unlikely to be feasible.
The best idea I can come up with is to pingflood each internal IP in turn, and then while that's going on, try and ping all the other IPs. This will help because you'll only get decent responses from machines that don't share a (now congested into oblivion) link with the one you're pingflooding. Basically you're using the fact that the backplane on the switches is much faster than the interconnects between them to map out which connections are via interconnects and which are via backplanes. This also lets you watch das blinkenlights and figure out which ports are used to connect to which IPs.
Sadly I know of no software that will do this for you.
pjzpjz32.8k55 gold badges4242 silver badges5353 bronze badges
If you haven't already, try HP Openview trial version, and apart of using SNMP, it also uses ARP tables to figure out your topology.
JayJay
I've personally had the same issue. Fun. I partially solved the problem by installing new Cisco Catalyst Switches in the main data closet and setting the Smart Ports profile on each port to 'Desktop'. This limits the port to 1 MAC address.
Any port with an unmanaged hub/switch attached will be automatically disabled the first time more than one device is activated on the unmanaged device.
As I located unmanaged hubs/switches I replaced them with managed switches configured to limit each port to 1 MAC.
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If your budget won't allow this, the alternative is to trace each wire visually and manually verify the presence of unmanaged networking equipment.
paxos1977paxos197765.3k2323 gold badges8080 silver badges118118 bronze badges
You can expect these features in release of AdventNet's opmanager8.0 next month
user57792user57792
You can try NetskateKoban, that will give you the map with the number of terminals connected to each port of the managed switch. You can know the presence of unmanged device from there by the vendor name.
We have seen a similar kind of problem, where a network admin had to figure out how many switches (managed/unmanaged) are present. It will give you the location of such places. Try it out.. all the best
I've been looking into this and I found this old research paper Using VPS Probing to Discover Layer 2 Topology. The theory is that you can use Variable Packet Size (VPS) probing to discover layer 2 switches by the delay they introduce. I haven't had a chance to try it in practice yet.
Update: I found a later version of the paper called Using Simple Per-Hop Capacity Metrics to Discover Link Layer Network Topology
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