|
|
This chapter is an abbreviated procedure for installing Catalyst 2820 Series or
Catalyst 1900 Series switches. Use this chapter if you are familiar with installing and managing 10BaseT hubs and you are aware of the configuration and planning requirements of a 100BaseTX network.
![]() | Caution If you do not have 10BaseT hub experience, are not familiar with 100BaseTX, or want to change the default settings, use the installation procedure described in the "Installation" chapter. |
Check the package. It should contain the following items:
Your switch ships with the default parameters listed in Table 5-1 in the chapter "Out-of-Band Management." You can change these parameters with the management console or with any SNMP-compatible management station. See the "Standard MIBs and MIB Extensions" section in the "In-Band Management" chapter for a list of the supported MIB objects and their functions.
To install your switch:
Step 1 Unpack the switch.
Step 2 Mount the switch on a table, shelf, or rack.
Step 3 Attach the power cable.
Step 4 Wait for the power-on self-test (POST) to run.
When the switch is first turned on and begins its POST, the system and port LEDs are green. As each of the 13 tests is run, the port LEDs, starting with number 16, turn off. Because there are only 13 tests, LEDs 15, 14, and 13 are unaffected.
If you are installing a 12-port Catalyst 1900, the LED for port A, the 100BaseT port, turns off first, followed by ports 12, 11, 10, and so on.
After the POST completes successfully, the port LEDs blink green and go off, indicating that the switch is operational. If a test fails, the port LEDs turn green, the port LED associated with the test stays off, and the system LED turns amber.
All POST failures except the real-time clock test (number 5) are fatal. If the real-time clock fails POST, the switch begins forwarding packets, but the system LED turns amber, and a POST-failure message appears on the console screen. Certain switch features, such as the bandwidth utilization meter, are lost if the real-time-clock test fails.
Step 5 Cable the workstations, servers, and other devices to the switch.
Step 6 Connect the switch to the network as required.
The switch becomes operational after configuring its spanning-tree topology.
|
|