A network packet broker aggregates network traffic from multiple ports for forwarding to analysis applications.
When a packet broker is attached to networking devices, a copy of the traffic that passes through the devices is sent to the packet broker. Based on your configuration, the packet broker filters the copied traffic for the data that you want to analyze. The packet broker then sends the filtered traffic to an analysis application.
Function | Description |
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ACL filtering | Directs network traffic based on Layer 2 to Layer 4 protocol headers |
Aggregation | Combines traffic that from multiple ports and directs it to one port or port channel |
Decapsulation | Removes the outer tunnel headers from a packet |
Header stripping | Removes header tags that are not supported by some visibility applications, including 802.1BR, VN (virtual NIC), VLAN, VXLAN, GTPU, GRE, and IPIP headers |
Load balancing | Distributes network traffic among ports in a port channel |
Packet slicing | Truncates packets to a specific size across ports. |
Replication | Copies network traffic to multiple ports and port channels. |
Route map forwarding | Redirects Layer 2 and Layer 3 packets to the selected physical or port channel interface |
Transport tunnel termination |
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Transport tunnel encapsulation | GRE only |