Allied Telesis AT-8900 Series Manuale Utente

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C613-16028-00 REV B
Providing a convincing case
If you believe that you have successfully hit on the right theory, and have isolated what 
appears to be a good candidate for the root cause of what is going wrong, gather as much 
evidence as you can to support the theory.
Often certain pre-conditions are pertinent to the circumstances in which the problem will or 
won't occur—'the problem still occurs even if port 2 is not connected'; 'if the ARP entry has 
been cleared before the route ages out, the problem does not happen' etc. It is important to 
capture the output to illustrate these pre-conditions—it might be very clear to you that port 
2 is definitely disconnected, but the person analysing the captures after you might not truly 
believe that unless they see the output of the show port command that shows port 2 to be 
DOWN.
Annotating afterwards
Before you send your capture off to the next layer of support or anyone else, you will want 
to give them as much guidance as possible as to how to extract the significant pieces of 
information from your capture. This can be achieved by going through the capture and 
putting in further comments to spell out more clearly what is happening than you were able 
to do with the quick comments you typed in while on-site. Or, you might want to copy the 
really important parts out of the capture and paste them into a separate file, to succinctly 
illustrate the core of the problem.
But, even if you copy the pertinent pieces out of the capture, still send the rest of the capture 
file anyway, there could be significant gems of information in there that you weren't aware of.
Concrete piece of advice #6: If you find a sequence of actions that make 
the problem happen, capture the full sequence (and the evidence that 
the problem has happened) multiple (more than 2) times if possible.
Concrete piece of advice #7: Capture as much evidence as possible to 
support any assertions you make about the circumstances in which you 
see the problem happen.
Concrete piece of advice #8: Some post-processing of the capture file 
can save a lot of time and effort for anyone who is analysing it after you.
Concrete piece of advice #9: If possible, always send everything that 
you captured—too much information is always better than too little.