Dell S6100 Configuration Manual page 927

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To connect servers and access switches with VLT peer switches, you use a VLT port channel, as shown in Overview. Up to 96 port-
channels are supported; up to 32 member links are supported in each port channel between the VLT domain and an access device.
The discovery protocol running between VLT peers automatically generates the ID number of the port channel that connects an
access device and a VLT switch. The discovery protocol uses LACP properties to identify connectivity to a common client device
and automatically generates a VLT number for port channels on VLT peers that connects to the device. The discovery protocol
requires that an attached device always runs LACP over the port-channel interface.
VLT provides a loop-free topology for port channels with endpoints on different chassis in the VLT domain.
VLT uses shortest path routing so that traffic destined to hosts via directly attached links on a chassis does not traverse the
chassis-interconnect link.
VLT allows multiple active parallel paths from access switches to VLT chassis.
VLT supports port-channel links with LACP between access switches and VLT peer switches. Dell Networking recommends using
static port channels on VLTi.
If VLTi connectivity with a peer is lost but the VLT backup connectivity indicates that the peer is still alive, the VLT ports on the
Secondary peer are orphaned and are shut down.
In one possible topology, a switch uses the BMP feature to receive its IP address, configuration files, and boot image from a
DHCP server that connects to the switch through the VLT domain. In the port-channel used by the switch to connect to the
VLT domain, configure the port interfaces on each VLT peer as hybrid ports before adding them to the port channel (see
Connecting a VLT Domain to an Attached Access Device (Switch or
carry untagged, single-tagged, and double-tagged traffic, use the portmode hybrid command in Interface Configuration
mode as described in
For example, if the DHCP server is on the ToR and VLTi (ICL) is down (due to either an unavailable peer or a link failure),
whether you configured the VLT LAG as static or LACP, when a single VLT peer is rebooted in BMP mode, it cannot reach the
DHCP server, resulting in BMP failure.
Software features supported on VLT port-channels
In a VLT domain, the following software features are supported on VLT port-channels: 802.1p, ingress and egress ACLs, BGP, DHCP
relay, IS-IS, OSPF, active-active PIM-SM, PIM-SSM, VRRP, Layer 3 VLANs, LLDP, flow control, port monitoring, jumbo frames,
IGMP snooping, sFlow, ingress and egress ACLs, and Layer 2 control protocols RSTP and PVST only.
NOTE:
result in an interface shutdown. PVST+ BPDUs for a nondefault VLAN is flooded out as any other L2 multicast
packet. On a default VLAN, RTSP is part of the PVST+ topology in that specific VLAN (default VLAN).
In a VLT domain, ingress and egress QoS policies are supported on physical VLT ports, which can be members of VLT port channels
in the domain.
Ingress and egress QoS policies applied on VLT ports must be the same on both VLT peers.
Apply the same ingress and egress QoS policies on VLTi (ICL) member ports to handle failed links.
For detailed information about how to use VRRP in a VLT domain, see the following VLT and VRRP interoperability section.
For information about configuring IGMP Snooping in a VLT domain, see
All system management protocols are supported on VLT ports, including SNMP, RMON, AAA, ACL, DNS, FTP, SSH, Syslog, NTP,
RADIUS, SCP, TACACS+, Telnet, and LLDP.
Enable Layer 3 VLAN connectivity VLT peers by configuring a VLAN network interface for the same VLAN on both switches.
Dell Networking does not recommend enabling peer-routing if the CAM is full. To enable peer-routing, a minimum of two local DA
spaces for wild-card functionality are required.
RSPAN and ERSPAN are supported on VLT.
FRRP is supported only on the VLTi. This feature enables configuration of an FRRP ring through VLTi. However, FRRP is not
supported on any other VLT port-channel except for VLTi.
Software features supported on VLT physical ports
In a VLT domain, the following software features are supported on VLT physical ports: 802.1p, LLDP, flow control, IPv6 dynamic
routing, port monitoring, and jumbo frames.
Software features not supported with VLT
In a VLT domain, the following software features are not supported on VLT ports: 802.1x, DHCP snooping, GVRP, and VXLAN.
VLT and VRRP interoperability
In a VLT domain, VRRP interoperates with virtual link trunks that carry traffic to and from access devices (see Overview). The VLT
peers belong to the same VRRP group and are assigned master and backup roles. Each peer actively forwards L3 traffic, reducing
the traffic flow over the VLT interconnect.
Configuring Native
VLANs.
Peer VLAN spanning tree plus (PVST+) passthrough is supported in a VLT domain. PVST+ BPDUs does not
Server)). To configure a port in Hybrid mode so that it can
VLT and IGMP
Snooping.
Virtual Link Trunking (VLT)
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