Network Switch Testing

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Revision as of 09:08, 27 August 2008 by Matteo (talk | contribs) (mass cleanup)
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The network device testing station currently consists of a computer with a nick that can handle gigabit Ethernet and wireless g. This computer also has a cerial port and software that can talk thought it.

Testing a switch

  • Verify that the network device is not to be immediately recycled, by consulting the list below
  • Connect power to the switch, and verify it starts up (some advanced switches may take up to a minute to start up)
  • Connect the network cable that has the internet on it to the wan or uplink port.
  • Verify that the link lights illuminate on the switch for the appropriate ports.
  • Plug in the network cable from the computer to the router.
  • On the PC surf the internet. this should not feel slow.
    • do this on every port by moving the network cable that connects to the computer

Recycle Criteria

Devices to be recycled without testing
  • DSL and cable modems (and DSL filters, phone cables, etc, if the store already has a few)
  • DSL and cable modems with built in hub, 'internet router', or wireless
  • 10BaseT hubs
  • Cheap-looking little no-name-brand hubs if they are piling up at the testing station
  • Cheap-looking little no-name-brand hubs if a matching power adapter can't be quickly found
  • Devices with noisy or bad fans, or that appear physically damaged
Devices to leave for advanced testing
  • Consumer-grade internet routers (with WAN ethernet port, not with DSL or Cable ports)
  • Consumer-grade wireless access points and wireless routers
  • Managed 10/100 switches with a console port that do not seem to pass testing
  • Professional-looking rack mount routers, firewalls, and other network devices