Multiple Vlan Considerations - HP 3500 Series Advanced Traffic Management Manual

Switch software
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Multiple VLAN Considerations

Switches use a forwarding database to maintain awareness of which external
devices are located on which VLANs. Some switches, such as the switches
covered in this guide, have a multiple forwarding database, which means the
switch allows multiple database entries of the same MAC address, with each
entry showing the (different) source VLAN and source port. Other switch
models have a single forwarding database, which means they allow only one
database entry of a unique MAC address, along with the source VLAN and
source port on which it is found. All VLANs on a switch use the same MAC
address. Thus, connecting a multiple forwarding database switch to a single
forwarding database switch where multiple VLANs exist imposes some
cabling and port VLAN assignment restrictions. Table 1-5 illustrates the func-
tional difference between the two database types.
Table 1-5. Example of Forwarding Database Content
Multiple Forwarding Database
MAC Address
Destination
VLAN ID
0004ea-84d9f4
1
0004ea-84d9f4
22
0004ea-84d9f4
44
0060b0-880a81
33
This database allows multiple destinations
for the same MAC address. If the switch
detects a new destination for an existing
MAC entry, it just adds a new instance of that
MAC to the table.
Table 1-6 lists the database structure of current HP switch models.
Single Forwarding Database
Destination
MAC Address
Port
A5
0004ea-84d9f4
A12
0060b0-880af9
A20
0060b0-880a81
A20
This database allows only one destination
for a MAC address. If the switch detects a
new destination for an existing MAC entry,
it replaces the existing MAC instance with
a new instance showing the new
destination.
Static Virtual LANs (VLANs)
Multiple VLAN Considerations
Destination
Destination
VLAN ID
Port
100
A9
105
A10
107
A17
1-17

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