Total 9 results found for the keyword of "eos section 9 1 environment control introduction"
Switch environment control The following sections describe the commands that display temperature, fan, and power supply status: environment control introduction environment control Overview Configuring ...
environment control Overview This section contains the following topics: Temperature Fans Power Temperature Arista switches include internal temperature sensors. The number and location ...
... clusters. This means the directly connected TaskTracker nodes can belong to different clusters. eos supports a maximum of five clusters per switch. MapReduce Tracer Configuration The MapReduce Tracer ...
... timestamp Drop count Device ID Egress interface FCS type Reserved TAP Aggregation Extra MPLS Pop (4 to 6 Labels) Available starting with eos Release 4.23.1F extra MPLS pop for TAP Aggregation ...
Latency Analyzer (LANZ) Arista Networks’ Latency Analyzer (LANZ) is a family of eos features that provide enhanced visibility into network dynamics, particularly in areas related to the delay packets experience ...
... STP state. When an interface used as an Ethernet segment does not have a forwarding state, eos considers the interface to be inactive. For a VLAN-based service, the port must be in a forwarding state on ...
... area and interface levels. Note: On the same area or interface, eos allows security configuration with either AH or ESP but not both. We can have one area or interface configured with AH and another ...
... OSPFv2 adjacencies with DR Other neighbors. OSPFv2 Multiple Instances Support eos Release 4.22.1F adds support for multiple OSPFv2 instances to be configured in the default VRF. OSPFv2 Multiple Instances ...
... often use prefix lists to filter routes. The RACL divergence optimizes hardware resource usage on each forwarding ASIC. eos installs ACLs only on the hardware components corresponding to the member interfaces ...