HP Virtual Connect Manager Command Line Interface for c-Class BladeSystem Version 3.10/3.15 User Guide
Command line  88 
Name  RFC  Description 
rfc1213_Dot1dTpPortInFrame
s 
1493 
The number of frames that have been 
received by his port from its segment. 
Note that a frame received on the 
interface corresponding to this port is 
only counted by this object if and 
only if it is for a protocol being 
processed by the local bridging 
function, including bridge 
management frames. 
rfc1757_StatsBroadcastPkts 
1757  The number of good packets 
received during this sampling 
interval that were directed to the 
broadcast address 
rfc1757_StatsCRCAlignErrors 
1757  The total number of packets received 
that had a length (excluding framing 
bits, but including FCS octets) of 
between 64 and 1518 octets, 
inclusive, but had either a bad Frame 
Check Sequence (FCS) with an 
integral number of octets (FCS Error) 
or a bad FCS with a non-integral 
number of octets (Alignment Error). 
rfc1757_StatsCollisions 
1757  The best estimate of the total number 
of collisions n this Ethernet segment. 
The value returned depends on the 
location of the RMON probe. Section 
8.2.1.3 (10BASE-5) and section 
10.3.1.3 (10BASE-2) of IEEE 
standard 802.3 states that a station 
must detect a collision, in the receive 
mode, if three or more stations are 
transmitting simultaneously. A 
repeater port must detect a collision 
when two or more stations are 
transmitting simultaneously. Thus a 
probe placed on a repeater port 
could record more collisions than a 
probe connected to a station on the 
same segment would. 
Probe location plays a much smaller 
role when considering 10BASE-T. 
14.2.1.4 (10BASE-T) of IEEE 
standard 802.3 defines a collision as 
the simultaneous presence of signals 
on the DO and RD circuits 
(transmitting and receiving at the 
same time). A 10BASE-T station can 
only detect collisions when it is 
transmitting. Thus probes placed on 
a station and a repeater, should 
report the same number of collisions. 
An RMON probe inside a repeater 
should ideally report collisions 
between the repeater and one or 










