Table Of Contents
Release Notes for Catalyst 3750-E
and Catalyst 3560-E Switches, Cisco IOS Release 12.2(46)SEDevice Manager System Requirements
Finding the Software Version and Feature Set
Upgrading a Switch by Using the Device Manager or Network Assistant
Upgrading a Switch by Using the CLI
Recovering from a Software Failure
Minimum Cisco IOS Release for Major Features
Cisco Redundant Power System 2300
Cisco X2 Transceiver Modules and SFP Modules
Stacking (only Catalyst 3750-E Switch Stack)
Updates to the Software Configuration Guide
Updates to the System Message Guide
Updates to the Getting Started Guides
Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request
Release Notes for Catalyst 3750-E
and Catalyst 3560-E Switches, Cisco IOS Release 12.2(46)SE
Revised January 6, 2009
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(46)SE and later runs on all Catalyst 3750-E and Catalyst 3560-E switches.
The Catalyst 3750-E switches support stacking through Cisco StackWise Plus technology. The Catalyst 3560-E switches do not support switch stacking. Unless otherwise noted, the term switch refers to a standalone switch and to a switch stack.
These release notes include important information about Cisco IOS Release 12.2(46)SE and any limitations, restrictions, and caveats that apply to it. Verify that these release notes are correct for your switch:
•
If you are installing a new switch, see the Cisco IOS release label on the rear panel of your switch.
•
If your switch is on, use the show version privileged EXEC command. See the "Finding the Software Version and Feature Set" section.
•
If you are upgrading to a new release, see the software upgrade filename for the software version. See the "Deciding Which Files to Use" section.
You can download the switch software from this site (registered Cisco.com users with a login password):
http://tools.cisco.com/support/downloads/go/MDFTree.x?butype=switches
This software release is part of a special release of Cisco IOS software that is not released on the same maintenance cycle that is used for other platforms. As maintenance releases and future software releases become available, they will be posted to Cisco.com in the Cisco IOS software area.
For the complete list of Catalyst 3750-E and Catalyst 3560-E switch documentation, see the "Related Documentation" section.
Contents
This information is in the release notes:
•
"System Requirements" section
•
"Upgrading the Switch Software" section
•
"Minimum Cisco IOS Release for Major Features" section
•
"Limitations and Restrictions" section
•
"Documentation Updates" section
•
"Related Documentation" section
•
"Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request" section
System Requirements
The system requirements are described in these sections:
•
"Device Manager System Requirements" section
•
"Cluster Compatibility" section
•
"CNA Compatibility" sectionOL-16487-01
Hardware Supported
Table 1 lists the hardware supported on this release.
Table 1 Catalyst 3750-E and Catalyst 3560-E Switches Supported Hardware
Switch Hardware Description Supported by Minimum Cisco IOS ReleaseCisco Catalyst 3750E-24TD
24 10/100/1000 Ethernet ports, 2 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
Cisco Catalyst 3750E-48TD
48 10/100/1000 Ethernet ports, 2 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
Cisco Catalyst 3750E-24PD
24 10/100/1000 PoE1 ports, 2 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
Cisco Catalyst 3750E-48PD
48 10/100/1000 ports with 370 W of PoE, 2 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
Cisco Catalyst 3750E-48PD
Full Power48 10/100/1000 ports with 740 W of PoE, 2 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
Cisco Catalyst 3560E-24TD
24 10/100/1000 Ethernet ports, 2 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
Cisco Catalyst 3560E-48TD
48 10/100/1000 Ethernet ports, 2 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
Cisco Catalyst 3560E-24PD
24 10/100/1000 PoE ports, 2 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
Cisco Catalyst 3560E-48PD
48 10/100/1000 ports with 370 W of PoE, 2 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
Cisco Catalyst 3560E-48PD
Full Power48 10/100/1000 ports with 740 W of PoE, 2 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
Cisco Catalyst 3560E-12D
12 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(40)EX
Cisco Catalyst 3560E-12SD
12 SFP2 module slots, 2 10-Gigabit Ethernet X2 module slots
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(44)SE
Cisco X2 transceiver modules
X2-10GB-SR V02 or later
X2-10GB-LR V03 or later
X2-10GB-ER V02 or later
X2-10GB-CX4 V03 or later
X2-10GB-LX4 V03 or later
X2-10GB-LRMCisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(40)SECisco TwinGig Converter Module
Dual SFP X2 converter module to allow the switch to support SFP Gigabit Ethernet modules
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
SFP modules
1000BASE-LX/LH
1000BASE-SX
1000BASE-ZX
1000BASE-BX10-D
1000BASE-BX10-U
1000BASE-T
100BASE-FX
CWDM3Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
DOM4 support for these SFP modules
X2-10GB-ER, X2-10GB-SR, X2-10GB-LR, X2-10GB-LRM, X2-10GB-ZR
GLC-ZX-SM, GLC-BX-D, GLC-BX-U
SFP-GE-S, SFP-GE-L, SFP-GE-Z
All CWDM and DWDM SFP modules
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(46)SE
SFP module patch cable5
CAB-SFP-50CM
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2
C3K-PWR-1150WAC
1150-W AC power supply module for PoE-capable switches
Supported on all software releases
C3K-PWR-750WAC
750-W AC power supply module for PoE-capable switches
Supported on all software releases
C3K-PWR-265WAC
265-W AC power supply module for nonPoE-capable switches
Supported on all software releases
C3K-PWR-265WDC
265-W DC power supply module for nonPoE-capable switches
Supported on all software releases
C3K-BLWR-60CFM
Fan module
Supported on all software releases
Redundant power system (RPS)
Cisco RPS 2300 RPS
Supported on all software releases
1 PoE = Power over Ethernet.
2 SFP = small form-factor pluggable
3 CWDM = coarse wavelength-division multiplexer
4 DOM = digital optical monitoring
5 Only Catalyst 3560-E switches. The SFP module patch cable is a 0.5-meter, copper, passive cable with SFP module connectors at each end. The patch cable can connect two Catalyst 3560-E switches in a cascaded configuration.
Device Manager System Requirements
These sections describe the hardware and software requirements for using the device manager:
•
"Hardware Requirements" section
•
"Software Requirements" section
Hardware Requirements
Table 2 lists the minimum hardware requirements for running the device manager.
Table 2 Minimum Hardware Requirements
Processor Speed DRAM Number of Colors Resolution Font Size233 MHz minimum1
512 MB2
256
1024 x 768
Small
1 We recommend 1 GHz.
2 We recommend 1 GB DRAM.
Software Requirements
Table 3 lists the supported operating systems and browsers for using the device manager. The device manager verifies the browser version when starting a session to ensure that the browser is supported.
Note
The device manager does not require a plug-in.
Table 3 Supported Operating Systems and Browsers
Operating System Minimum Service Pack or Patch Microsoft Internet Explorer1 Netscape NavigatorWindows 2000
None
5.5 or 6.0
7.1
Windows XP
None
5.5 or 6.0
7.1
1 Service Pack 1 or higher is required for Internet Explorer 5.5.
Cluster Compatibility
You cannot create and manage switch clusters through the device manager. To create and manage switch clusters, use the command-line interface (CLI) or the Network Assistant application.
When creating a switch cluster or adding a switch to a cluster, follow these guidelines:
•
When you create a switch cluster, we recommend configuring the highest-end switch in your cluster as the command switch.
•
If you are managing the cluster through Network Assistant, the switch with the latest software should be the command switch.
•
The standby command switch must be the same type as the command switch. For example, if the command switch is a Catalyst 3750-E switch, all standby command switches must be Catalyst 3750-E switches.
For additional information about clustering, see Getting Started with Cisco Network Assistant and Release Notes for Cisco Network Assistant (not orderable but available on Cisco.com), the software configuration guide, and the command reference.
CNA Compatibility
Cisco IOS 12.2(35)SE2 and later is only compatible with Cisco Network Assistant 5.0 and later. You can download Network Assistant from this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/pcgi-bin/tablebuild.pl/NetworkAssistant
For more information about Cisco Network Assistant, see the Release Notes for Cisco Network Assistant on Cisco.com.
Upgrading the Switch Software
These are the procedures for downloading software. Before downloading software, read this section for important information:
•
"Finding the Software Version and Feature Set" section
•
"Deciding Which Files to Use" section
•
"Upgrading a Switch by Using the Device Manager or Network Assistant" section
•
"Upgrading a Switch by Using the CLI" section
•
"Recovering from a Software Failure" section
Finding the Software Version and Feature Set
The Cisco IOS image is stored as a bin file in a directory that is named with the Cisco IOS release. A subdirectory contains the files needed for web management. The image is stored on the system board flash device (flash:).
You can use the show version privileged EXEC command to see the software version that is running on your switch. The second line of the display shows the version.
Note
Although the show version output always shows the software image running on the switch, the model name shown at the end of this display is the factory configuration (IP base feature set or IP services feature set) and does not change if you upgrade the software license.
You can also use the dir filesystem: privileged EXEC command to see the directory names of other software images that you might have stored in flash memory.
Deciding Which Files to Use
The upgrade procedures in these release notes describe how to perform the upgrade by using a combined tar file. This file contains the Cisco IOS image file and the files needed for the embedded device manager. You must use the combined tar file to upgrade the switch through the device manager. To upgrade the switch through the command-line interface (CLI), use the tar file and the archive download-sw privileged EXEC command.
Table 4 lists the filenames for this software release.
Note
For IPv6 routing and IPv6 ACL capability on the Catalyst 3750-E or 3560-E switch, you must get the advanced IP services software license from Cisco.
The universal software images support multiple feature sets. Use the software activation feature to deploy a software license and to enable a specific feature set. For information about software activation, see the Cisco Software Activation and Compatibility Document on Cisco.com:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps7077/tsd_products_support_series_home.html
Archiving Software Images
Before upgrading your switch software, make sure that you have archived copies of the current Cisco IOS release and the Cisco IOS release from which you are upgrading. You should keep these archived images until you have upgraded all devices in the network to the new Cisco IOS image and until you have verified that the new Cisco IOS image works properly in your network.
Cisco routinely removes old Cisco IOS versions from Cisco.com. See Product Bulletin 2863 for more information:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/iosswrel/ps5187/prod_bulletin0900aecd80281c0e.html
You can copy the bin software image file on the flash memory to the appropriate TFTP directory on a host by using the copy flash: tftp: privileged EXEC command.
Note
Although you can copy any file on the flash memory to the TFTP server, it is time-consuming to copy all of the HTML files in the tar file. We recommend that you download the tar file from Cisco.com and archive it on an internal host in your network.
You can also configure the switch as a TFTP server to copy files from one switch to another without using an external TFTP server by using the tftp-server global configuration command. For more information about the tftp-server command, see the "Basic File Transfer Services Commands" section of the Cisco IOS Configuration Fundamentals Command Reference, Release 12.2, at this URL:
Upgrading a Switch by Using the Device Manager or Network Assistant
You can upgrade switch software by using the device manager or Network Assistant. For detailed instructions, click Help.
Note
When using the device manager to upgrade your switch, do not use or close your browser session after the upgrade process begins. Wait until after the upgrade process completes.
Upgrading a Switch by Using the CLI
This procedure is for copying the combined tar file to the switch. You copy the file to the switch from a TFTP server and extract the files. You can download an image file and replace or keep the current image.
To download software, follow these steps:
Step 1
Use Table 4 to identify the file that you want to download.
Step 2
Download the software image file. If you have a SmartNet support contract, go to this URL, and log in to download the appropriate files:
http://www.cisco.com/public/sw-center/sw-lan.shtml
To download the universal software image files for a Catalyst 3750-E switch, click Catalyst 3750-E software. To obtain authorization and to download the cryptographic software files, click Catalyst 3750-E 3DES Cryptographic Software.
To download the universal software image files for a Catalyst 3560-E switch, click Catalyst 3560-E software. To obtain authorization and to download the cryptographic software files, click Catalyst 3560-E 3DES Cryptographic Software.
Step 3
Copy the image to the appropriate TFTP directory on the workstation, and make sure that the TFTP server is properly configured.
For more information, see Appendix B in the software configuration guide for this release.
Step 4
Log into the switch through the console port or a Telnet session.
Step 5
(Optional) Ensure that you have IP connectivity to the TFTP server by entering this privileged EXEC command:
Switch# ping tftp-server-addressFor more information about assigning an IP address and default gateway to the switch, see the software configuration guide for this release.
Step 6
Download the image file from the TFTP server to the switch. If you are installing the same version of software that is currently on the switch, overwrite the current image by entering this privileged EXEC command:
Switch# archive download-sw /overwrite /reload tftp:[[//location]/directory]/image-name.tarThe /overwrite option overwrites the software image in flash memory with the downloaded one.
The /reload option reloads the system after downloading the image unless the configuration has been changed and not saved.
For //location, specify the IP address of the TFTP server.
For /directory/image-name.tar, specify the directory (optional) and the image to download. Directory and image names are case sensitive.
This example shows how to download an image from a TFTP server at 198.30.20.19 and to overwrite the image on the switch:
Switch# archive download-sw /overwrite tftp://198.30.20.19/c3750e-universal-tar.122-46.SE.tarYou can also download the image file from the TFTP server to the switch and keep the current image by replacing the /overwrite option with the /leave-old-sw option.
Recovering from a Software Failure
For additional recovery procedures, see the "Troubleshooting" chapter in the software configuration guide for this release.
Installation Notes
You can assign IP information to your switch by using these methods:
•
The Express Setup program, as described in the switch getting started guide.
•
The CLI-based setup program, as described in the switch hardware installation guide.
•
The DHCP-based autoconfiguration, as described in the switch software configuration guide.
•
Manually assigning an IP address, as described in the switch software configuration guide.
New Features
These sections describe the new supported hardware and the new and updated software features provided in this release:
•
"New Hardware Features" section
•
"New Software Features" section
New Hardware Features
For a list of all supported hardware, see the "Hardware Supported" section.
New Software Features
These are the new software features for this release:
•
Generic message authentication support with the SSH Protocol and compliance with RFC 4256
•
Voice aware IEEE 802.1x and mac authentication bypass (MAB) security violation to shut down only the data VLAN on a port when a security violation occurs
•
Local web authentication banner so that custom banner or image file can be displayed at a web authentication login screen
•
Support for the CISCO-NAC-NAD and CISCO-PAE MIBs
•
Digital Optical Monitoring (DOM) of connected SFP modules
•
The ability to exclude a port in a VLAN from the SVI line-state up or down calculation
•
Support for HSRP Version 2 (HSRPv2)
•
HSRP for IPv6 (requires the advanced IP services image)
•
Disabling MAC address learning on a VLAN
•
PAgP Interaction with Virtual Switches and Dual-Active Detection, also referred to as enhanced PAgP
•
Support for rehosting a software license and for using an embedded evaluation software license
•
EOT and IP SLAs EOT static route support to identify when a preconfigured static route or a DHCP route goes down
•
DHCP server port-based address allocation for the preassignment of an IP address to a switch port
•
DHCP for IPv6 relay, client, server address assignment and prefix delegation (requires the advanced IP services image)
•
IPv6 port-based trust with dual IPv4 and IPv6 SDM templates
•
IPv6 default router preference (DRP) for improving the ability of a host to select an appropriate router
Minimum Cisco IOS Release for Major Features
Table 5 lists the minimum software release (after the first release) required to support the major features of the Catalyst 3750-E and Catalyst 3560-E switches. Features not listed are supported in all releases.
Limitations and Restrictions
You should review this section before you begin working with the switch. These are known limitations that will not be fixed, and there is not always a workaround. Some features might not work as documented, and some features could be affected by recent changes to the switch hardware or software.
This section contains these limitations:
•
"Cisco IOS Limitations" section
•
"Device Manager Limitations" section
Cisco IOS Limitations
Unless otherwise noted, these limitations apply to the Catalyst 3750-E and 3560-E switches:
•
"Access Control List" section
•
"Address Resolution Protocol" section
•
"Cisco Redundant Power System 2300" section
•
"Cisco X2 Transceiver Modules and SFP Modules" section
•
"IEEE 802.1x Authentication" section
•
"Stacking (only Catalyst 3750-E Switch Stack)" section
Access Control List
These are the access control list (ACL) limitations:
•
The Catalyst 3750-E and Catalyst 3560-E switches have 964 TCAM entries available for ACLs in the default and routing SDM templates instead of the 1024 entries that are available on the Catalyst 3560 and Catalyst 3750 switches.
There is no workaround. (CSCse33114)
•
When a MAC access list is used to block packets from a specific source MAC address, that MAC address is entered in the switch MAC-address table.
The workaround is to block traffic from the specific MAC address by using the mac address-table static mac-addr vlan vlan-id drop global configuration command. (CSCse73823)
Address Resolution Protocol
This is an Address Resolution Protocol limitation:
•
The switch might place a port in an error-disabled state due to an Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) rate limit exception even when the ARP traffic on the port is not exceeding the configured limit. This could happen when the burst interval setting is 1 second, the default.
The workaround is to set the burst interval to more than 1 second. We recommend setting the burst interval to 3 seconds even if you are not experiencing this problem.(CSCse06827))
Cisco Redundant Power System 2300
This is the Cisco Redundant Power System (RPS) 2300 limitation:
•
When connecting the RPS cable between the RPS 2300 and the Catalyst 3750-E or 3560-E switch or other supported network devices, this communication error might appear:
PLATFORM_ENV-1-RPS_ACCESS: RPS is not responding
No workaround is required because the problem corrects itself. (CSCsf15170)
Cisco X2 Transceiver Modules and SFP Modules
These are the Cisco X2 transceiver module and SFP module limitations:
•
Cisco X2-10GB-CX4 transceiver modules with a version identification number lower than V03 might be difficult to insert because of a dimensional tolerance discrepancy. The workaround is to use modules with a version identification number of V03 or later. (CSCsg28558)
•
Switches with the Cisco X2-10GB-LX4 transceiver modules with a version identification number prior to V03 might intermittently fail. The workaround is to use Cisco X2-10GB-LX4 transceiver modules with a version identification number of V03 or later. (CSCsh60076)
•
Cisco GLC-GE-100FX SFP modules with a serial number between OPC0926xxxx and OPC0945xxxx might show intermittent module not valid, data, status, link-flapping, and FCS errors. The workaround is to use modules with serial numbers that are not in the specified range. (CSCsh59585)
•
When switches are installed closely together and the uplink ports of adjacent switches are in use, you might have problems accessing the SFP module bale-clasp latch to remove the SFP module or the SFP cable (Ethernet or fiber). Use one of these workarounds:
–
Allow space between the switches when installing them.
–
In a switch stack, plan the SFP module and cable installation so that uplinks in adjacent stack members are not all in use.
–
Use long, small screwdriver to access the latch then remove the SFP module and cable. (CSCsd57938)
•
When a Cisco X2-10GB-CX4 transceiver module is in the X2 transceiver module port and you enter the show controllers ethernet-controller tengigabitethernet privileged EXEC command, the command displays some fields as unspecified. This is the expected behavior based IEEE 802.3ae. (CSCsd47344)
•
The far-end fault optional facility is not supported on the GLC-GE-100FX SFP module. The workaround is to configure aggressive UDLD. (CSCsh70244).
Configuration
These are the configuration limitations:
•
When an excessive number (more than 100 packets per second) of Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) packets are sent to a Network Admission Control (NAC) Layer 2 IP-configured member port, a switch might display a message similar to this:
PLATFORM_RPC-3-MSG_THROTTLED: RPC Msg Dropped by throttle mechanism: type 0, class 51, max_msg 128, total throttled 984323
-Traceback= 6625EC 5DB4C0 5DAA98 55CA80 A2F2E0 A268D8
No workaround is necessary. Under normal conditions, the switch generates this notification when snooping the next ARP packet. (CSCse47548)
•
When there is a VLAN with protected ports configured in fallback bridge group, packets might not be forwarded between the protected ports.
The workaround is to not configure VLANs with protected ports as part of a fallback bridge group. (CSCsg40322)
When a switch port configuration is set at 10 Mb/s half duplex, sometimes the port does not send in one direction until the port traffic is stopped and then restarted. You can detect the condition by using the show controller ethernet-controller or the show interfaces privileged EXEC commands.
The workaround is to stop the traffic in the direction in which it is not being forwarded, and then restart it after 2 seconds. You can also use the shutdown interface configuration command followed by the no shutdown command on the interface. (CSCsh04301)
•
When line rate traffic is passing through a dynamic port, and you enter the switchport access vlan dynamic interface configuration command for a range of ports, the VLANs might not be assigned correctly. One or more VLANs with a null ID appears in the MAC address table instead.
The workaround is to enter the switchport access vlan dynamic interface configuration command separately on each port.(CSCsi26392)
EtherChannel
These are the EtherChannel limitations:
•
In an EtherChannel running Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP), the ports might be put in the suspended or error-disabled state after a stack partitions or a member switch reloads. This occurs when:
–
The EtherChannel is a cross-stack EtherChannel with a switch stack at one or both ends.
–
The switch stack partitions because a member reloads. The EtherChannel is divided between the two partitioned stacks, each with a stack master.
The EtherChannel ports are put in the suspended state because each partitioned stack sends LACP packets with different LACP Link Aggregation IDs (the system IDs are different). The ports that receive the packets detect the incompatibility and shut down some of the ports. Use one of these workarounds for ports in this error-disabled state:
–
Enable the switch to recover from the error-disabled state.
–
Enter the shutdown and the no shutdown interface configuration commands to enable the port.
The EtherChannel ports are put in the error-disabled state because the switches in the partitioned stacks send STP BPDUs. The switch or stack at the other end of the EtherChannel receiving the multiple BPDUs with different source MAC addresses detects an EtherChannel misconfiguration.
After the partitioned stacks merge, ports in the suspended state should automatically recover. (CSCse33842)
•
When a switch stack is configured with a cross-stack EtherChannel, it might transmit duplicate packets across the EtherChannel when a physical port in the EtherChannel has a link-up or link-down event. This can occur for a few milliseconds while the switch stack adjusts the EtherChannel for the new set of active physical ports and can happen when the cross-stack EtherChannel is configured with either mode ON or LACP. This problem might not occur with all link-up or link-down events.
No workaround is necessary. The problem corrects itself after the link-up or link-down event. (CSCse75508)
•
The switch might display tracebacks similar to this example when an EtherChannel interface port-channel type changes from Layer 2 to Layer 3 or the reverse:
15:50:11: %COMMON_FIB-4-FIBNULLHWIDB: Missing hwidb for fibhwidb Port-channel1 (ifindex 1632) -Traceback= A585C B881B8 B891CC 2F4F70 5550E8 564EAC 851338 84AF0C 4CEB50 859DF4 A7BF28 A98260 882658 879A58
There is no workaround. (CSCsh12472)
IEEE 802.1x Authentication
These are the IEEE 802.1x authentication limitations:
•
If a supplicant using a Marvel Yukon network interface card (NIC) is connected an IEEE 802.1x-authorized port in multihost mode, the extra MAC address of 0c00.0000.0000 appears in the MAC address table.
Use one of these workarounds (CSCsd90495):
–
Configure the port for single-host mode to prevent the extra MAC address from appearing in the MAC address table.
–
Replace the NIC card with a new card.
•
When MAC authentication bypass is configured to use Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) for authorization and critical authentication is configured to assign a critical port to an access VLAN:
–
If the connected device is supposed to be unauthorized, the connected device might be authorized on the VLAN that is assigned to the critical port instead of to a guest VLAN.
–
If the device is supposed to be authorized, it is authorized on the VLAN that is assigned to the critical port.
Use one of these workarounds (CSCse04534):
–
Configure MAC authentication bypass to not use EAP.
–
Define your network access profiles to not use MAC authentication bypass. For more information, see the Cisco Access Control Server (ACS) documentation.
•
When IEEE 802.1x authentication with VLAN assignment is enabled, a CPUHOG message might appear if the switch is authenticating supplicants in a switch stack.
The workaround is not use the VLAN assignment option. (CSCse22791)
Multicasting
These are the multicasting limitations:
•
Multicast packets with a time-to-live (TTL) value of 0 or 1 are flooded in the incoming VLAN when all of these conditions are met:
–
Multicast routing is enabled in the VLAN.
–
The source IP address of the packet belongs to the directly connected network.
–
The TTL value is either 0 or 1.
The workaround is to not generate multicast packets with a TTL value of 0 or 1, or disable multicast routing in the VLAN. (CSCeh21660)
•
Multicast packets denied by the multicast boundary access list are flooded in the incoming VLAN when all of these conditions are met:
–
Multicast routing is enabled in the VLAN.
–
The source IP address of the multicast packet belongs to a directly connected network.
–
The packet is denied by the IP multicast boundary access-list configured on the VLAN.
There is no workaround. (CSCei08359)
•
Reverse path forwarding (RPF) failed multicast traffic might cause a flood of Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) messages in the VLAN when a packet source IP address is not reachable.
The workaround is to not send RPF-failed multicast traffic, or make sure that the source IP address of the RPF-failed packet is reachable. (CSCsd28944)
•
If the clear ip mroute privileged EXEC command is used when multicast packets are present, it might cause temporary flooding of incoming multicast traffic in the VLAN.
There is no workaround. (CSCsd45753)
•
When you configure the ip igmp max-groups number and ip igmp max-groups action replace interface configuration commands and the number of reports exceed the configured max-groups value, the number of groups might temporarily exceed the configured max-groups value. No workaround is necessary because the problem corrects itself when the rate or number of IGMP reports are reduced. (CSCse27757)
•
When you configure the IGMP snooping throttle limit by using the ip igmp max-groups number interface configuration on a port-channel interface, the groups learned on the port-channel might exceed the configured throttle limit number, when all of these conditions are true:
–
The port-channel is configured with member ports across different switches in the stack.
–
When one of the member switches reloads.
–
The member switch that is reloading has a high rate of IP IGMP joins arriving on the port-channel member port.
The workaround is to disable the IGMP snooping throttle limit by using the no ip igmp max-groups number interface configuration command and then to reconfigure the same limit again. (CSCse39909)
PoE
These are the power-over-Ethernet (PoE) limitations:
•
When a loopback cable is connected to a switch PoE port, the show interface status privileged EXEC command shows not connected, and the link remains down. When the same loopback cable is connected to a non-PoE port, the link becomes active and then transitions to the error-disabled state when the keepalive feature is enabled. There is no workaround. (CSCsd60647)
•
The Cisco 7905 IP Phone is error-disabled when the phone is connected to an external power source.
The workaround is to enable PoE and to configure the switch to recover from the PoE error-disabled state. (CSCsf32300)
•
The pethPsePortShortCounter MIB object appears as short even though the powered device is powered on after it is connected to the PoE port.
There is no workaround. (CSCsg20629)
QoS
These are the quality of service (QoS) limitations:
•
When QoS is enabled and the egress port receives pause frames at the line rate, the port cannot send packets.
There is no workaround. (CSCeh18677)
•
Egress shaped round robin (SRR) sharing weights do not work properly with system jumbo MTU frames.
There is no workaround. (CSCsc63334)
•
In a hierarchical policy map, if the VLAN-level policy map is attached to a VLAN interface and the name of the interface-level policy map is the same as that for another VLAN-level policy map, the switch rejects the configuration, and the VLAN-level policy map is removed from the interface.
The workaround is to use a different name for the interface-level policy map. (CSCsd84001)
•
If the ingress queue has low buffer settings and the switch sends multiple data streams of system jumbo MTU frames at the same time at the line rate, the frames are dropped at the ingress.
There is no workaround. (CSCsd72001)
•
When you use the srr-queue bandwidth limit interface configuration command to limit port bandwidth, packets that are less than 256 bytes can cause inaccurate port bandwidth readings. The accuracy is improved when the packet size is greater than 512 bytes. There is no workaround. (CSCsg79627)
Routing
These are the routing limitations:
•
The switch stack might reload if the switch runs with this configuration for several hours, depleting the switch memory and causing the switch to fail:
–
The switch has 400 Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) neighbors.
–
The switch has thousands of OSPF routes.
The workaround is to reduce the number of OSPF neighbors to 200 or less. (CSCse65252)
•
When the PBR is enabled and QoS is enabled with DSCP settings, the CPU utilization might be high if traffic is sent to unknown destinations.
The workaround is to not send traffic to unknown destinations. (CSCse97660)
SPAN and RSPAN
This is the SPAN and Remote SPAN (RSPAN) limitation.
•
When egress SPAN is running on a 10-Gigabit Ethernet port, only about 12 percent of the egress traffic is monitored.
There is no workaround. This is a hardware limitation. (CSCei10129)
•
The far-end fault optional facility is not supported on the GLC-GE-100FX SFP module.
The workaround is to configure aggressive UDLD. (CSCsh70244).
VLANs
These are the VLAN limitations:
•
When the domain is authorized in the guest VLAN on a member switch port without link loss and an Extensible Authentication Protocol over LAN (EAPOL) is sent to an IEEE 802.1x supplicant to authenticate, the authentication fails. This problem happens intermittently with certain stacking configurations and only occurs on the member switches.
The workaround is to enter the shut and no shut interface configuration commands on the port to reset the authentication status. (CSCsf98557)
•
The error message %DOT1X_SWITCH-5-ERR_VLAN_NOT_FOUND might appear for a switch stack under these conditions:
–
IEEE 802.1 is enabled.
–
A supplicant is authenticated on at least one port.
–
A new member joins a switch stack.
You can use one of these workarounds:
–
Enter the shutdown and the no shutdown interface configuration commands to reset the port.
–
Remove and reconfigure the VLAN. (CSCsi26444)
Stacking (only Catalyst 3750-E Switch Stack)
These are the Catalyst 3750-E switch stack limitations:
•
Where there is a mixed hardware stack with Catalyst 3750-E and 3750 switches as stack members, when you change the configuration and enter the write memory privileged EXEC command, the unable to read config message appears.
The workaround is to wait a few seconds and then to reenter the write memory privileged EXEC command. (CSCsd66272)
•
When using the logging console global configuration command, low-level messages appear on both the stack master and the stack member consoles.
The workaround is to use the logging monitor global configuration command to set the severity level to block the low-level messages on the stack member consoles. (CSCsd79037)
•
In a mixed stack which consists of Catalyst 3750 switches along with Catalyst 3750-E switches, when the stack ring is congested with approximately 40 Gb/s of traffic, some of the local traffic from one port to another on a Catalyst 3750-E member might be dropped.
The workaround is to avoid traffic congestion on the stack ring. (CSCsd87538)
•
If a new member switch joins a switch stack within 30 seconds of a command to copy the switch configuration to the running configuration of the stack master, the new member might not get the latest running configuration and might not operate properly.
The workaround is to reboot the new member switch. Use the remote command all show run privileged EXEC command to compare the running configurations of the stack members. (CSCsf31301)
•
When the flash memory of a stack member is almost full, it might take longer to start up than other member switches. This might cause that switch to miss the stack-master election window. As a result, the switch might fail to become the stack master even though it has the highest priority.
The workaround is to delete files in the flash memory to create more free space. (CSCsg30073)
•
In a mixed stack of Catalyst 3750 switches and Catalyst 3750-E switches, when the stack reloads, the Catalyst 3750-E might not become stack master, even it has a higher switch priority set.
The workaround is to check the flash. If it contains many files, remove the unnecessary ones. Check the lost and found directory in flash and if there are many files, delete them. To check the number of files use the fsck flash: command. (CSCsi69447)
•
After a stack bootup, the spanning tree state of a port that has IEEE 802.1x enabled might be blocked, even when the port is in the authenticated state. This can occur on a voice port where the Port Fast feature is enabled.
The workaround is to enter a shutdown interface configuration command followed by a no shutdown command on the port in the blocked state. (CSCsl64124)
Device Manager Limitations
This is the device manager limitation:
•
When you are prompted to accept the security certificate and you click No, you only see a blank screen, and the device manager does not launch.
The workaround is to click Yes when you are prompted to accept the certificate. (CSCef45718)
Important Notes
These sections describe the important notes related to this software release for the Catalyst 3750-E and 3560-E switches:
•
"Device Manager Notes" section
Switch Stack Notes
These notes apply to switch stacks:
•
Always power off a switch before adding or removing it from a switch stack.
•
The Catalyst 3560-E switches do not support switch stacking. However, the show processes privileged EXEC command still lists stack-related processes. This occurs because these switches share common code with other switches that do support stacking.
•
Catalyst 3750-E switches running Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE2 are compatible with Catalyst 3750 switches and Cisco EtherSwitch service modules running Cisco IOS Release 12.2(35)SE. Catalyst 3750-E switches, Catalyst 3750 switches, and Cisco EtherSwitch service modules can be in the same switch stack. In this switch stack, we recommend that the Catalyst 3750-E switch be the stack master.
Cisco IOS Notes
These notes apply to Cisco IOS software:
•
If the switch requests information from the Cisco Secure Access Control Server (ACS) and the message exchange times out because the server does not respond, a message similar to this appears:
00:02:57: %RADIUS-4-RADIUS_DEAD: RADIUS server 172.20.246.206:1645,1646 is not responding.If this message appears, make sure that there is network connectivity between the switch and the ACS. You should also make sure that the switch has been properly configured as an AAA client on the ACS.
•
If the switch has interfaces with automatic QoS for voice over IP (VoIP) configured and you upgrade the switch software to Cisco IOS Release 12.2(40)SE (or later), when you enter the auto qos voip cisco-phone interface configuration command on another interface, you might see this message:
AutoQoS Error: ciscophone input service policy was not properly appliedpolicy map AutoQoS-Police-CiscoPhone not configuredIf this happens, enter the no auto qos voip cisco-phone interface command on all interface with this configuration to delete it. Then enter the auto qos voip cisco-phone command on each of these interfaces to reapply the configuration.
Device Manager Notes
These notes apply to the device manager:
•
You cannot create and manage switch clusters through the device manager. To create and manage switch clusters, use the CLI or Cisco Network Assistant.
•
When the switch is running a localized version of the device manager, the switch displays settings and status only in English letters. Input entries on the switch can only be in English letters.
•
For device manager session on Internet Explorer, popup messages in Japanese or in simplified Chinese can appear as garbled text. These messages appear properly if your operating system is in Japanese or Chinese.
•
We recommend this browser setting to speed up the time needed to display the device manager from Microsoft Internet Explorer.
From Microsoft Internet Explorer:
1.
Choose Tools > Internet Options.
2.
Click Settings in the "Temporary Internet files" area.
3.
From the Settings window, choose Automatically.
4.
Click OK.
5.
Click OK to exit the Internet Options window.
•
The HTTP server interface must be enabled to display the device manager. By default, the HTTP server is enabled on the switch. Use the

