MAC Movement Overview
A MAC address is considered to have been moved
when the same MAC address is received on a different interface in the same VLAN. In MCT,
MAC movement is allowed on both local and remote nodes. However, a high MAC move rate
can indicate the existence of a loop in the network, or an issue with the server-side
interface, resulting in flapping. A high move rate requires the control plane to process
an extremely high rate of MAC learn events and can potentially exhaust the control plane
resources.
MAC Move Definitions
- Rapid MAC Movement: A MAC that moves across
multiple Logical Interfaces (LIF), ports, and VLANs is tracked for each second
it moves. If the number of moves crosses the defined threshold, then it is
treated as a MAC Move violation.
- Slow MAC Movement: In the first second that
MAC movement is detected, the movement is monitored. In that first second, if
the number of moves does not cross the threshold, then the MAC will be tracked
for a maximum of 10 seconds. If after 10 seconds the total number of moves is
within the threshold, then no action is taken. If it exceeds the threshold
limit, then an action will be triggered.