Supported Vlans; Vlan Port Membership Modes - Cisco IE-4000 Software Configuration Manual

Industrial ethernet switch
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Configuring VLANs
VLANs
Traffic between VLANs must be routed or fallback bridged. The switch can route traffic between VLANs by using switch
virtual interfaces (SVIs). An SVI must be explicitly configured and assigned an IP address to route traffic between VLANs.
Note:
If you plan to configure many VLANs on the switch and to not enable routing, you can use the sdm prefer vlan
global configuration command to set the Switch Database Management (sdm) feature to the VLAN template, which
configures system resources to support the maximum number of unicast MAC addresses. For more information on the
SDM templates, see

Supported VLANs

The switch supports VLANs in VTP client, server, and transparent modes. VLANs are identified by a number from 1 to
4096. VLAN IDs 1002 through 1005 are reserved for Token Ring and FDDI VLANs.
VTP version 1 and version 2 support only normal-range VLANs (VLAN IDs 1 to 1005). In these versions, the switch must
be in VTP transparent mode when you create VLAN IDs from 1006 to 4096.
This release supports VTP version 3. VTP version 3 supports the entire VLAN range (VLANs 1 to 4096). Extended range
VLANs (VLANs 1006 to 4096) are supported only in VTP version 3. You cannot convert from VTP version 3 to VTP version
2 if extended VLANs are configured in the domain.
Although the switch supports a total of 1005 (normal range and extended range) VLANs, the number of routed ports,
SVIs, and other configured features affects the use of the switch hardware.
The switch supports per-VLAN spanning-tree plus (PVST+) or rapid PVST+ with a maximum of 128 spanning-tree
instances. One spanning-tree instance is allowed per VLAN. See
page 275
for more information about the number of spanning-tree instances and the number of VLANs.

VLAN Port Membership Modes

You configure a port to belong to a VLAN by assigning a membership mode that specifies the kind of traffic the port
carries and the number of VLANs to which it can belong.
membership and VTP characteristics.
Configuring SDM Templates, page 137
Normal-Range VLAN Configuration Guidelines,
Table 33 on page 273
lists the membership modes and
272

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