This looks like Crestron
http://www.crestron.com/products/show_products.asp?type=commercial
Heidelbe has a few more hits so good luck there
http://standards.ieee.org/cgi-bin/ouisearch
I am way out of date on my cisco but I think you can look at what
mac addresses are attached to what ports, might take some time but should be
able to track down the port, unplug it and wait for someone to complain about
something not working.
Good luck
tim
From: wireshark-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:wireshark-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Phillip
Nelson
Sent: Monday, November 09, 2009 10:14 AM
To: wireshark-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [Wireshark-users] Unknown OUI's...
I just
experienced a Vlan saturation event where the following source and destination
MAC address were in all the packets causing the saturation. Does anyone
recognize the OUI's of these two addresses? I have tried to look them up and
can't find them anywhere.
The network
has a 6509 for its core and 30 switches connected by fiber. Of the 30 switches,
11 are 4003's. Of the 4003's, 5 were affected by the storm and only two
were participating in the storm. The trace was taken from the
Cisco 6509 and the two participating Cisco 4003's. The broadcast storm was
exactly the same between the two switches. We have ruled out all devices
connected to the switches. We cannot find the MAC addresses anywhere on the
network. We stopped the storm by resetting all the ports on the two 4003's.
Heidelbe_ab:99:6f
Crestron_eb:ac:cf
0x883d
Ethernet II
Phil Nelson
Arrow ECS
Infrastructure
Engineer, Senior
28600
Fountain Pkwy
Solon, Ohio
44139
email- pnelson@xxxxxxxxx
w-216-332-3405
c-330-524-0463
f-
440-498-5178