Table Of Contents
Release Notes for the Catalyst 2960 Switches, Cisco IOS Release 12.2(37)EY
Device Manager System Requirements
Finding the Software Version and Feature Set
Upgrading a Switch by Using the Device Manager or Network Assistant
Upgrading a Switch by Using the CLI
Recovering from a Software Failure
Obtaining Documentation, Obtaining Support, and Security Guidelines
Release Notes for the Catalyst 2960 Switches, Cisco IOS Release 12.2(37)EY
August 8, 2007
Cisco IOS Releases 12.2(37)EY runs only on Catalyst 2960 switches that support the LAN Lite image. For information on other releases of the Catalyst 2960 switches, see the Release Notes for the Catalyst 3750, 3560, 2970, and 2960 Switches, Cisco IOS Release 12.2(37)SE and later.
These release notes include important information about Cisco IOS Release 12.2(37)EY and any limitations, restrictions, and caveats that apply to this release. Verify that these release notes are correct for your switch:
•If you are installing a new switch, see the Cisco IOS release label on the rear panel of your switch.
•If your switch is on, use the show version privileged EXEC command. See the "Finding the Software Version and Feature Set" section.
•If you are upgrading to a new release, see the software upgrade filename for the software version. See the "Deciding Which Files to Use" section.
Cisco IOS Release 12.2(37)EY is based on Cisco IOS Release 12.2(37)SE. Open caveats in Cisco IOS Release 12.2(37)SE also affect Cisco IOS Release 12.2(37)EY, unless they are listed in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2(37)EY resolved caveats list. The list of open caveats in Cisco IOS Release 12.2(37)SE is available at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/switches/ps5023/prod_release_note09186a0080838bbf.html
For the complete list of Catalyst 2960 switch documentation, see the "Related Documentation" section.
You can download the switch software from this site (registered Cisco.com users with a login password):
http://tools.cisco.com/support/downloads/go/MDFTree.x?butype=switches
This software release is part of a special release of Cisco IOS software that is not released on the same 8-week maintenance cycle that is used for other platforms. As maintenance releases and future software releases become available, they will be posted to Cisco.com in the Cisco IOS software area.
Contents
This information is in the release notes:
•"System Requirements" section
•"Upgrading the Switch Software" section
•"Limitations and Restrictions" section
•"Obtaining Documentation, Obtaining Support, and Security Guidelines" section
System Requirements
The system requirements are described in these sections:
•"Device Manager System Requirements" section
•"Cluster Compatibility" section
Hardware Supported
Table 1 lists the hardware supported on this release.
Table 1 Catalyst 2960 Switch Supported Hardware
Switch DescriptionCatalyst 2960-24-S
24 10/100BASE-TX Ethernet ports
Catalyst 2960-24TC-S
24 10/100BASE-TX Ethernet ports and 2 dual-purpose uplinks1 (two 10/100/1000BASE-T copper ports and two SFP2 module slots)
Catalyst 2960-48TC-S
48 10/100BASE-TX Ethernet ports and 2 dual-purpose uplinks1 (two 10/100/1000BASE-T copper ports and two SFP module slots)
1 Each uplink port is considered a single interface with dual front ends (RJ-45 connector and SFP module slot). The dual front ends are not redundant interfaces, and only one port of the pair is active.
2 SFP = small form-factor pluggable.
Device Manager System Requirements
These sections describes the hardware and software requirements for using the device manager:
•"Hardware Requirements" section
•"Software Requirements" section
Hardware Requirements
Table 2 lists the minimum hardware requirements for running the device manager.
Table 2 Minimum Hardware Requirements
Processor Speed DRAM Number of Colors Resolution Font SizeIntel Pentium II1
64 MB2
256
1024 x 768
Small
1 We recommend Intel Pentium 4.
2 We recommend 256-MB DRAM.
Software Requirements
Table 3 lists the supported operating systems and browsers for using the device manager. The device manager verifies the browser version when starting a session to ensure that the browser is supported.
Note The device manager does not require a plug-in.
Table 3 Supported Operating Systems and Browsers
Operating System Minimum Service Pack or Patch Microsoft Internet Explorer 1 Mozilla FirefoxWindows 2000
None
5.5, 6.0 or 7.0
1.5
Windows XP
None
5.5, 6.0 or 7.0
1.5
1 Service Pack 1 or higher is required for Internet Explorer 5.5.
Cluster Compatibility
You cannot create and manage switch clusters through the device manager. To create and manage switch clusters, use the command-line interface (CLI) or the Network Assistant application.
When creating a switch cluster or adding a switch to a cluster, follow these guidelines:
•When you create a switch cluster, we recommend configuring the highest-end switch in your cluster as the command switch.
•If you are managing the cluster through Network Assistant, the switch with the latest software should be the command switch.
•The standby command switch must be the same type as the command switch. For example, if the command switch is a Catalyst 2960 switch, all standby command switches must be Catalyst 2960 switches.
For additional information about clustering, see Getting Started with Cisco Network Assistant and Release Notes for Cisco Network Assistant (not orderable but available on Cisco.com), the software configuration guide, the command reference, and the Cisco EtherSwitch service module feature guide.
CNA Compatibility
Cisco IOS 12.2(37)EY is only compatible with Cisco Network Assistant (CNA) 5.2 and later. You can download Cisco Network Assistant from this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/pcgi-bin/tablebuild.pl/NetworkAssistant
For more information about Cisco Network Assistant, see the Release Notes for Cisco Network Assistant on Cisco.com.
Upgrading the Switch Software
These are the procedures for downloading software. Before downloading software, read this section for important information:
•"Finding the Software Version and Feature Set" section
•"Deciding Which Files to Use" section
•"Upgrading a Switch by Using the Device Manager or Network Assistant" section
•"Upgrading a Switch by Using the CLI" section
•"Recovering from a Software Failure" section
Finding the Software Version and Feature Set
The Cisco IOS image is stored as a bin file in a directory that is named with the Cisco IOS release. A subdirectory contains the files needed for web management. The image is stored on the system board flash device (flash:).
You can use the show version privileged EXEC command to see the software version that is running on your switch. The second line of the display shows the version.
You can also use the dir filesystem: privileged EXEC command to see the directory names of other software images that you might have stored in flash memory.
Deciding Which Files to Use
The upgrade procedures in these release notes describe how to perform the upgrade by using a combined tar file. This file contains the Cisco IOS image file and the files needed for the embedded device manager. You must use the combined tar file to upgrade the switch through the device manager. To upgrade the switch through the command-line interface (CLI), use the tar file and the archive download-sw privileged EXEC command.
These are the Cisco IOS Software image files for the Catalyst 2960 switch:
Archiving Software Images
Before upgrading your switch software, make sure that you have archived copies of the current Cisco IOS release and the Cisco IOS release to which you are upgrading. You should keep these archived images until you have upgraded all devices in the network to the new Cisco IOS image and until you have verified that the new Cisco IOS image works properly in your network.
Cisco routinely removes old Cisco IOS versions from Cisco.com. See Product Bulletin 2863 for more information:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/iosswrel/ps5187/prod_bulletin0900aecd80281c0e.html
You can copy the bin software image file on the flash memory to the appropriate TFTP directory on a host by using the copy flash: tftp: privileged EXEC command.
Note Although you can copy any file on the flash memory to the TFTP server, it is time consuming to copy all of the HTML files in the tar file. We recommend that you download the tar file from Cisco.com and archive it on an internal host in your network.
You can also configure the switch as a TFTP server to copy files from one switch to another without using an external TFTP server by using the tftp-server global configuration command. For more information about the tftp-server command, see the "Basic File Transfer Services Commands" section of the Cisco IOS Configuration Fundamentals Command Reference, Release 12.2 at this URL:
Upgrading a Switch by Using the Device Manager or Network Assistant
You can upgrade switch software by using the device manager or Network Assistant. For detailed instructions, click Help.
Note When using the device manager to upgrade your switch, do not use or close your browser session after the upgrade process begins. Wait until after the upgrade process completes.
Upgrading a Switch by Using the CLI
This procedure is for copying the combined tar file to the switch. You copy the file to the switch from a TFTP server and extract the files. You can download an image file and replace or keep the current image.
To download software, follow these steps:
Step 1 Identify the file that you want to download.
Step 2 Download the software image file. If you have a SmartNet support contract, go to this URL, and log in to download the appropriate files:
http://www.cisco.com/kobayashi/sw-center/sw-lan.shtml
To download the image for a Catalyst 2960 switch, click Catalyst 2960 software. To obtain authorization and to download the cryptographic software files, click Catalyst 2960 3DES Cryptographic Software.
Step 3 Copy the image to the appropriate TFTP directory on the workstation, and make sure that the TFTP server is properly configured.
For more information, see Appendix B in the software configuration guide for this release.
Step 4 Log into the switch through the console port or a Telnet session.
Step 5 (Optional) Ensure that you have IP connectivity to the TFTP server by entering this privileged EXEC command:
Switch# ping tftp-server-address
For more information about assigning an IP address and default gateway to the switch, see the software configuration guide for this release.
Step 6 Download the image file from the TFTP server to the switch. If you are installing the same version of software that is currently on the switch, overwrite the current image by entering this privileged EXEC command:
Switch# archive download-sw /overwrite /reload tftp:[[//location]/directory]/image-name.tarThe /overwrite option overwrites the software image in flash memory with the downloaded one.
The /reload option reloads the system after downloading the image unless the configuration has been changed and not saved.
For //location, specify the IP address of the TFTP server.
For /directory/image-name.tar, specify the directory (optional) and the image to download. Directory and image names are case sensitive.
This example shows how to download an image from a TFTP server at 198.30.20.19 and to overwrite the image on the switch:
Switch# archive download-sw /overwrite tftp://198.30.20.19/c2960-ipservices-tar.122-37.EY.tarYou can also download the image file from the TFTP server to the switch and keep the current image by replacing the /overwrite option with the /leave-old-sw option.
Recovering from a Software Failure
For additional recovery procedures, see the "Troubleshooting" chapter in the software configuration guide for this release.
Installation Notes
You can assign IP information to your switch by using these methods:
•The Express Setup program, as described in the switch getting started guide.
•The CLI-based setup program, as described in the switch hardware installation guide.
•The DHCP-based autoconfiguration, as described in the switch software configuration guide.
•Manually assigning an IP address, as described in the switch software configuration guide.
New Features
These sections describe the new supported hardware and the new and updated software features provided in this release:
•"New Hardware Features" section
•"New Software Features" section
New Hardware Features
For a list of all supported hardware, see the "Hardware Supported" section.
New Software Features
This release is the first software release for the Catalyst 2960 switches with LAN Lite software. For a detailed list of features for this software release, refer to the Catalyst 2960 Switch LAN Lite Software Configuration Guide.
Limitations and Restrictions
You should review this section before you begin working with the switch. These are known limitations that will not be fixed, and there is not always a workaround. Some features might not work as documented, and some features could be affected by recent changes to the switch hardware or software.
This section contains these limitations:
•"Cisco IOS Limitations" section
•"Device Manager Limitations" section
Cisco IOS Limitations
These limitations apply to the Catalyst 2960 switch:
Configuration
These are the configuration limitations:
•A static IP address might be removed when the previously acquired DHCP IP address lease expires.
This problem occurs under these conditions:
–When the switch is booted up without a configuration (no config.text file in flash memory).
–When the switch is connected to a DHCP server that is configured to give an address to it (the dynamic IP address is assigned to VLAN 1).
–When an IP address is configured on VLAN 1 before the dynamic address lease assigned to VLAN 1 expires.
The workaround is to reconfigure the static IP address. (CSCea71176 and CSCdz11708)
•When connected to some third-party devices that send early preambles, a switch port operating at 100 Mb/s full duplex or 100 Mb/s half duplex might bounce the line protocol up and down. The problem is observed only when the switch is receiving frames.
The workaround is to configure the port for 10 Mb/s and half duplex or to connect a hub or a nonaffected device to the switch. (CSCed39091)
•When port security is enabled on an interface in restricted mode and the switchport block unicast interface command has been entered on that interface, MAC addresses are incorrectly forwarded when they should be blocked
The workaround is to enter the no switchport block unicast interface configuration command on that specific interface. (CSCee93822)
•A traceback error occurs if a crypto key is generated after an SSL client session.
There is no workaround. This is a cosmetic error and does not affect the functionality of the switch. (CSCef59331)
Ethernet
These are the Ethernet limitations:
•Traffic on EtherChannel ports is not perfectly load-balanced. Egress traffic on EtherChannel ports are distributed to member ports on load balance configuration and traffic characteristics like MAC or IP address. More than one traffic stream may map to same member ports based on hashing results calculated by the ASIC.
If this happens, uneven traffic distribution will happen on EtherChannel ports.
Changing the load balance distribution method or changing the number of ports in the EtherChannel can resolve this problem. Use any of these workarounds to improve EtherChannel load balancing:
–for random source-ip and dest-ip traffic, configure load balance method as src-dst-ip
–for incrementing source-ip traffic, configure load balance method as src-ip
–for incrementing dest-ip traffic, configure load balance method as dst-ip
–Configure the number of ports in the EtherChannel so that the number is equal to a power of 2 (i.e. 2, 4, or 8)
For example, with load balance configured as dst-ip with 150 distinct incrementing destination IP addresses, and the number of ports in the EtherChannel set to either 2, 4, or 8, load distribution is optimal.(CSCeh81991)
IP Telephony
These are the IP telephony limitations:
•Some access point devices are incorrectly discovered as IEEE 802.3af Class 1 devices. These access points should be discovered as Cisco pre-standard devices. The show power inline user EXEC command shows the access point as an IEEE Class 1 device. The workaround is to power the access point by using an AC wall adaptor. (CSCin69533)
•After you change the access VLAN on a port that has IEEE 802.1x enabled, the IP phone address is removed. Because learning is restricted on IEEE 802.1x-capable ports, it takes approximately 30 seconds before the address is relearned. No workaround is necessary. (CSCea85312)
•The Cisco 7905 IP Phone is error-disabled when the phone is connected to wall power.
The workaround is to enable PoE and to configure the switch to recover from the PoE error-disabled state. (CSCsf32300)
SPAN
This is the SPAN limitation.
•Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP), VLAN Trunking Protocol (VTP), and Port Aggregation Protocol (PAgP) packets received from a SPAN source are not sent to the destination interfaces of a local SPAN session. The workaround is to use the monitor session session_number destination {interface interface-id encapsulation replicate} global configuration command for local SPAN. (CSCed24036)
Trunking
These are the trunking limitations:
•The switch treats frames received with mixed encapsulation (IEEE 802.1Q and Inter-Switch Link [ISL]) as frames with FCS errors, increments the error counters, and the port LED blinks amber. This happens when an ISL-unaware device receives an ISL-encapsulated packet and forwards the frame to an IEEE 802.1Q trunk interface. There is no workaround. (CSCdz33708)
•IP traffic with IP options set is sometimes leaked on a trunk port. For example, a trunk port is a member of an IP multicast group in VLAN X but is not a member in VLAN Y. If VLAN Y is the output interface for the multicast route entry assigned to the multicast group and an interface in VLAN Y belongs to the same multicast group, the IP-option traffic received on an input VLAN interface other than one in VLAN Y is sent on the trunk port in VLAN Y because the trunk port is forwarding in VLAN Y, even though the port has no group membership in VLAN Y. There is no workaround. (CSCdz42909).
•For trunk ports or access ports configured with IEEE 802.1Q tagging, inconsistent statistics might appear in the show interfaces counters privileged EXEC command output. Valid IEEE 802.1Q frames of 64 to 66 bytes are correctly forwarded even though the port LED blinks amber, and the frames are not counted on the interface statistics. There is no workaround. (CSCec35100).
VLAN
This is the VLAN limitation:
•If the number of VLANs times the number of trunk ports exceeds the recommended limit of 13,000, the switch can fail.
The workaround is to reduce the number of VLANs or trunks. (CSCeb31087)
Device Manager Limitations
These are the device manager limitations:
•When you are prompted to accept the security certificate and you click No, you only see a blank screen, and the device manager does not launch.
The workaround is to click Yes when you are prompted to accept the certificate. (CSCef45718)
Important Notes
These sections describe the important notes related to this software release for the Catalyst 2960 switch:
•"Device Manager Notes" section
Cisco IOS Notes
This note applies to Cisco IOS software:
•If the switch requests information from the Cisco Secure Access Control Server (ACS) and the message exchange times out because the server does not respond, a message similar to this appears:
00:02:57: %RADIUS-4-RADIUS_DEAD: RADIUS server 172.20.246.206:1645,1646 is not responding.If this message appears, check that there is network connectivity between the switch and the ACS. You should also check that the switch has been properly configured as an AAA client on the ACS.
Device Manager Notes
These notes apply to the device manager:
•You cannot create and manage switch clusters through the device manager. To create and manage switch clusters, use the CLI or Cisco Network Assistant.
•When the switch is running a localized version of the device manager, the switch displays settings and status only in English letters. Input entries on the switch can only be in English letters.
•For device manager session on Internet Explorer, popup messages in Japanese or in simplified Chinese can appear as garbled text. These messages appear properly if your operating system is in Japanese or Chinese
•We recommend this browser setting to speed up the time needed to display the device manager from Microsoft Internet Explorer.
From Microsoft Internet Explorer:
1. Choose Tools > Internet Options.
2. Click Settings in the "Temporary Internet files" area.
3. From the Settings window, choose Automatically.
4. Click OK.
5. Click OK to exit the Internet Options window.
•The HTTP server interface must be enabled to display the device manager. By default, the HTTP server is enabled on the switch. Use the show running-config privileged EXEC command to see if the HTTP server is enabled or disabled.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to configure the HTTP server interface:
•The device manager uses the HTTP protocol (the default is port 80) and the default method of authentication (the enable password) to communicate with the switch through any of its Ethernet ports and to allow switch management from a standard web browser.
If you change the HTTP port, you must include the new port number when you enter the IP address in the browser Location or Address field (for example, http://10.1.126.45:184 where 184 is the new HTTP port number). You should write down the port number through which you are connected. Use care when changing the switch IP information.
If you are not using the default method of authentication (the enable password), you need to configure the HTTP server interface with the method of authentication used on the switch.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to configure the HTTP server interface:
•If you use Internet Explorer Version 5.5 and select a URL with a nonstandard port at the end of the address (for example, www.cisco.com:84), you must enter http:// as the URL prefix. Otherwise, you cannot launch the device manager.
Open Caveats
This section describes the open caveats in this software release:
•CSCsb85001
If traffic is passing through VMPS ports and you perform a shut operation, a dynamic VLAN is not assigned and a VLAN with a null ID appears.
The workaround is to clear the MAC address table. This forces the VMPS server to correctly reassign the VLAN.
•CSCsc96474
The switch might display tracebacks similar to these examples when a large number of IEEE 802.1x supplicants try to repeatedly log in and log out.
Examples:
Jan 3 17:54:32 L3A3 307: Jan 3 18:04:13.459: %SM-4-BADEVENT: Event 'eapReq' is invalid for the current state 'auth_bend_idle': dot1x_auth_bend Fa9
Jan 3 17:54:32 L3A3 308: -Traceback= B37A84 18DAB0 2FF6C0 2FF260 8F2B64 8E912C Jan 3 19:06:13 L3A3 309: Jan 3 19:15:54.720: %SM-4-BADEVENT: Event 'eapReq_no_reAuthMax' is invalid for the current ate 'auth_restart': dot1x_auth Fa4
Jan 3 19:06:13 L3A3 310: -Traceback= B37A84 18DAB0 3046F4 302C80 303228 8F2B64 8E912C Jan 3 20:41:44 L3A3 315: .Jan 3 20:51:26.249: %SM-4-BADEVENT: Event 'eapSuccess' is invalid for the current state 'auth_restart': dot1x_auth Fa9
Jan 3 20:41:44 L3A3 316: -Traceback= B37A84 18DAB0 304648 302C80 303228 8F2B64 8E912C
There is no workaround.
•CSCsd03580
When IEEE 802.1x is globally disabled on the switch by using the no dot1x system-auth-control global configuration command, some interface level configuration commands, including the dot1x timeout command, become unavailable.
The workaround is to enable the dot1x system-auth-control global configuration command before attempting to configure interface level IEEE 802.1x parameters.
on command to the configuration and re-establishes communication with the RADIUS server.
•CSCse06827
•The switch might place a port in an error-disabled state due to an Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) rate limit exception even when the ARP traffic on the port is not exceeding the configured limit. This could happen when the burst interval setting is 1 second, the default.
The workaround is to set the burst interval to more than 1 second. We recommend setting the burst interval to 3 seconds even if you are not experiencing this problem.
•CSCsg79506
During repeated reauthentication of supplicants on an IEEE 802.1x-enabled switch, if the RADIUS server is repeatedly going out of service and then coming back up, the available switch memory might deplete over time, eventually causing the switch to shut down.
There is no work-around, except to ensure that the RADIUS server is stable.
•CSCsg81334
If IEEE 802.1x critical authentication is not enabled and the RADIUS authentication server is temporarily unavailable during a reauthentication, when the RADIUS server comes back up, MAC authentication bypass (MAB) does not authenticate a previously authenticated client.
The workaround is to enter the shutdown interface configuration command followed by the no shutdown command on the port connected to the client. An alternative, to prevent the problem from occurring, is to enable critical authentication by entering the dot1x critical {eapol | recovery delay milliseconds} global configuration command.
•CSCsi26392
When line rate traffic is passing through a dynamic port, and you enter the switchport access vlan dynamic interface configuration command for a range of ports, the VLANs might not be assigned correctly. One or more VLANs with a null ID appears in the MAC address table instead.
The workaround is to enter the switchport access vlan dynamic interface configuration command separately on each port.
•CSCsi26444
The error message %DOT1X_SWITCH-5-ERR_VLAN_NOT_FOUND might appear for a switch stack under these conditions:
–IEEE 802.1 is enabled.
–A supplicant is authenticated on at least one port.
–A new member joins a switch stack.
You can use one of these workarounds:
–Enter the shutdown and the no shutdown interface configuration commands to reset the port.
–Remove and reconfigure the VLAN.
•CSCsi52707
When setting an interface to its default configuration by using the default command, or when clearing the 802.1X mac-auth-bypass configuration from a port that was never authenticated, this message might appear:
01:18:09: %SM-4-STOPPED: Event 'mabAbort' ignored because the state machine is stopped: dot1x_auth_mab -Traceback= 1D2368 3C1BA8 3C1D40 3C16A8 9EF8D8 9E6CC4There is no workaround. This message is only information, switch functionality is not affected.
•CSCsi75246
An address learned as a supplicant that is aged out by port security aging is never relearned by port security under any of these conditions:
–IEEE 802.1x authentication, port security, and port security aging are enabled on a port.
–An address is cleared by port security.
–You enter the clear port security privileged EXEC command.
The workaround is to use the dot1x timeout interface configuration command instead of the port security aging timer as the reauthentication timer for IEEE 802.
•CSCsj04337
You receive an Invalid Certificate error message when you start the Cisco Device Manager from a Firefox web browser.
There is no workaround.
•CSCsj42841
You cannot start a Telnet session from the Cisco Device Manager from an Internet Explorer 7.0 web browser.
The workaround is to start a Telnet session from the command-line prompt.
Resolved Caveats
This section describes the resolved caveats in this software release:
•CSCin95836
The Cisco Next Hop Resolution Protocol (NHRP) feature in Cisco IOS contains a vulnerability that can result in a restart of the device or possible remote code execution.
NHRP is a primary component of the Dynamic Multipoint Virtual Private Network (DMVPN) feature.
NHRP can operate in three ways: at the link layer (Layer 2), over Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) and multipoint GRE (mGRE) tunnels and directly on IP (IP protocol number 54). This vulnerability affects all three methods of operation.
NHRP is not enabled by default for Cisco IOS.
This vulnerability is addressed by Cisco bug IDs CSCin95836 for non-12.2 mainline releases and CSCsi23231 for 12.2 mainline releases.
This advisory is posted at
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/707/cisco-sa-20070808-nhrp.shtml.
•CSCsg70474
Multiple voice-related vulnerabilities are identified in Cisco IOS software, one of which is also shared with Cisco Unified Communications Manager. These vulnerabilities pertain to the following protocols or features:
–Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)
–Media Gateway Control Protocol (MGCP)
–Signaling protocols H.323, H.254
–Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP)
–Facsimile reception
Cisco has made free software available to address these vulnerabilities for affected customers. Fixed Cisco IOS software listed in the Software Versions and Fixes section contains fixes for all vulnerabilities mentioned in this advisory.
There are no workarounds available to mitigate the effects of any of the vulnerabilities apart from disabling the protocol or feature itself.
This advisory is posted at http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/707/cisco-sa-20070808-IOS-voice.shtml
•CSCsi60004
Multiple voice-related vulnerabilities are identified in Cisco IOS software, one of which is also shared with Cisco Unified Communications Manager. These vulnerabilities pertain to the following protocols or features:
–Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)
–Media Gateway Control Protocol (MGCP)
–Signaling protocols H.323, H.254
–Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP)
–Facsimile reception
Cisco has made free software available to address these vulnerabilities for affected customers. Fixed Cisco IOS software listed in the Software Versions and Fixes section contains fixes for all vulnerabilities mentioned in this advisory.
There are no workarounds available to mitigate the effects of any of the vulnerabilities apart from disabling the protocol or feature itself.
This advisory is posted at http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/707/cisco-sa-20070808-IOS-voice.shtml
Related Documentation
You can order printed copies of documents with a DOC-xxxxxx= number from the Cisco.com sites and from the telephone numbers listed in the URL referenced in the Obtaining Documentation, Obtaining Support, and Security Guidelines section.
These documents provide complete software information about the Catalyst 2960 switch that supports the LAN Lite Image:
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Software Configuration Guide for the LAN Lite Image (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps6406/products_configuration_guide_book09186a0080892a54.html
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Command Reference for the LAN Lite Image (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps6406/products_command_reference_book09186a008088e095.html
These documents provide complete information about other Catalyst 2960 switches:
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Software Configuration Guide (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Command Reference (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Catalyst 3750, 3560, 3550, 2970, and 2960 Switch System Message Guide (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Hardware Installation Guide (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Getting Started Guide (order number DOC-7816879=)
Note The above getting started guide, orderable in print, provides information in all supported languages. Listed below are online-only getting started guides in the individual languages.
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Getting Started Guide—English (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Getting Started Guide—Chinese (Simplified) (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Getting Started Guide—French (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Getting Started Guide—German (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Getting Started Guide—Italian (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Getting Started Guide—Japanese (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Catalyst 2960 Switch Getting Started Guide—Spanish (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Regulatory Compliance and Safety Information for the Catalyst 2960 Switch (order number DOC-7816880=)
For other information about related products, see these documents:
•Device manager online help (available on the switch)
•Getting Started with Cisco Network Assistant (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Release Notes for Cisco Network Assistant (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Cisco RPS 300 Redundant Power System Hardware Installation Guide (order number DOC-7810372=)
•Cisco RPS 675 Redundant Power System Hardware Installation Guide (order number DOC-7815201=)
•For more information about the Network Admission Control (NAC) features, see the Network Admission Control Software Configuration Guide (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
•Cisco Small Form-Factor Pluggable Modules Installation Notes (order number DOC-7815160=)
•These compatibility matrix documents are available from this Cisco.com site:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/modules/ps5455/products_device_support_tables_list.html
–Cisco Gigabit Ethernet Transceiver Modules Compatibility Matrix (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
–Cisco 100-Megabit Ethernet SFP Modules Compatibility Matrix (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
–Cisco Small Form-Factor Pluggable Modules Compatibility Matrix (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
–Compatibility Matrix for 1000BASE-T Small Form-Factor Pluggable Modules (not orderable but available on Cisco.com)
Obtaining Documentation, Obtaining Support, and Security Guidelines
For information on obtaining documentation, obtaining support, providing documentation feedback, security guidelines, and also recommended aliases and general Cisco documents, see the monthly What's New in Cisco Product Documentation, which also lists all new and revised Cisco technical documentation, at:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/general/whatsnew/whatsnew.html
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