Avaya 1603SW ユーザーガイド

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Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP)
Issue 1 June 2010
91
 
port-based operation. These switches typically send multicast 802.1X packets to authenticating 
devices. 
These switches support the following three scenarios:
Standalone telephone (Telephone Only Authenticates) - When the deskphone is 
configured for Supplicant Mode (DOT1XSTAT=2), the deskphone can support 
authentication from the switch.
Telephone with attached PC (Telephone Only Authenticates) - When the deskphone is 
configured for Supplicant Mode (DOT1X=2 and DOT1XSTAT=2), the deskphone can 
support authentication from the switch. The attached PC in this scenario gains access to 
the network without being authenticated.
Telephone with attached PC (PC Only Authenticates) - When the deskphone is 
configured for Pass-Through Mode or Pass-Through Mode with Logoff (DOT1X=0 or 1 and 
DOT1XSTAT=0), an attached PC running 802.1X supplicant software can be 
authenticated by the data switch. The telephone in this scenario gains access to the 
network without being authenticated.
Some switches support authentication of multiple devices connected through a single switch 
port. This is known as multi-supplicant or MAC-based operation. These switches typically send 
unicast 802.1X packets to authenticating devices. These switches support the following two 
scenarios:
Standalone deskphone (Deskphone Only Authenticates) - When the deskphone is 
configured for Supplicant Mode (DOT1XSTAT=2), the deskphone can support 
authentication from the switch. When DOT1X is "0" or "1", the deskphone is unable to 
authenticate with the switch.
Deskphone and PC Dual Authentication - Both the deskphone and the connected PC 
can support 802.1X authentication from the switch. The deskphone may be configured for 
Pass-Through Mode or Pass-Through Mode with Logoff (DOT1X=0 or 1 and 
DOT1XSTAT=1 or 2). The attached PC must be running 802.1X supplicant software. 
Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP)
Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) is an open standards layer 2 protocol IP deskphones use 
to advertise their identity and capabilities and to receive administration from an LLDP server. 
LAN equipment can use LLDP to manage power, administer VLANs, and provide some 
administration.
The transmission and reception of LLDP is specified in IEEE 802.1AB-2005. The 1603SW-I SIP 
IP Deskphones use Type-Length-Value (TLV) elements specified in IEEE 802.1AB-2005, TIA 
TR-41 Committee - Media Endpoint Discovery (LLDP-MED, ANSI/TIA-1057), and Proprietary 
elements. LLDP Data Units (LLDPDUs) are sent to the LLDP Multicast MAC address 
(01:80:c2:00:00:0e). 
These deskphones:
do not support LLDP on the secondary Ethernet interface.