01-31-2022 08:34 AM
Solved! Go to Solution.
02-01-2022 12:55 PM
Hi VidarA,
As you may have seen from relevant articles, please note that the 'debug packet capture' command is not an official feature. It is not advertised as a feature nor is it regression tested during QA. It is simply a troubleshooting tool that is useful in certain situations, but please note that your mileage may vary and this command has the potential to cause other issues.
Regarding your specific questions:
Unfortunately, I dont think that the x435 has this capability at all due to the smaller image required by the x435. The internal command simply does not exist on this platforms.
For the x440-G2, I would generally expect this to work. That said, I've never had any luck doing a debug packet capture on a port. I generally only use debug packet capture on interface netTx or Broadcom (note case-sensitive internal interface names; debug packet capture on interface Broadcom), that capture traffic going to/from the switch internals; I find those captures to work most often.
02-01-2022 12:55 PM
Hi VidarA,
As you may have seen from relevant articles, please note that the 'debug packet capture' command is not an official feature. It is not advertised as a feature nor is it regression tested during QA. It is simply a troubleshooting tool that is useful in certain situations, but please note that your mileage may vary and this command has the potential to cause other issues.
Regarding your specific questions:
Unfortunately, I dont think that the x435 has this capability at all due to the smaller image required by the x435. The internal command simply does not exist on this platforms.
For the x440-G2, I would generally expect this to work. That said, I've never had any luck doing a debug packet capture on a port. I generally only use debug packet capture on interface netTx or Broadcom (note case-sensitive internal interface names; debug packet capture on interface Broadcom), that capture traffic going to/from the switch internals; I find those captures to work most often.