Ieee 802.1Q Configuration Considerations; Default Layer 2 Ethernet Interface Vlan Configuration; Configuring An Ethernet Interface As A Trunk Port - Cisco WS-C3020 Software Configuration Manual

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Chapter 11
Configuring VLANs

IEEE 802.1Q Configuration Considerations

The IEEE 802.1Q trunks impose these limitations on the trunking strategy for a network:

Default Layer 2 Ethernet Interface VLAN Configuration

Table 11-6
Table 11-6
Feature
Interface mode
Trunk encapsulation
Allowed VLAN range
VLAN range eligible for pruning
Default VLAN (for access ports)
Native VLAN (for IEEE 802.1Q trunks) VLAN 1

Configuring an Ethernet Interface as a Trunk Port

Because trunk ports send and receive VTP advertisements, to use VTP you must ensure that at least one
trunk port is configured on the switch and that this trunk port is connected to the trunk port of a second
switch. Otherwise, the switch cannot receive any VTP advertisements.
OL-8915-03
In a network of Cisco switches connected through IEEE 802.1Q trunks, the switches maintain one
spanning-tree instance for each VLAN allowed on the trunks. Non-Cisco devices might support one
spanning-tree instance for all VLANs.
When you connect a Cisco switch to a non-Cisco device through an IEEE 802.1Q trunk, the Cisco
switch combines the spanning-tree instance of the VLAN of the trunk with the spanning-tree
instance of the non-Cisco IEEE 802.1Q switch. However, spanning-tree information for each VLAN
is maintained by Cisco switches separated by a cloud of non-Cisco IEEE 802.1Q switches. The
non-Cisco IEEE 802.1Q cloud separating the Cisco switches is treated as a single trunk link between
the switches.
Make sure the native VLAN for an IEEE 802.1Q trunk is the same on both ends of the trunk link. If
the native VLAN on one end of the trunk is different from the native VLAN on the other end,
spanning-tree loops might result.
Disabling spanning tree on the native VLAN of an IEEE 802.1Q trunk without disabling spanning
tree on every VLAN in the network can potentially cause spanning-tree loops. We recommend that
you leave spanning tree enabled on the native VLAN of an IEEE 802.1Q trunk or disable spanning
tree on every VLAN in the network. Make sure your network is loop-free before disabling spanning
tree.
shows the default Layer 2 Ethernet interface VLAN configuration.

Default Layer 2 Ethernet Interface VLAN Configuration

Default Setting
switchport mode dynamic auto
switchport trunk encapsulation negotiate
VLANs 1 to 4094
VLANs 2 to 1001
VLAN 1
Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3020 for HP Software Configuration Guide
Configuring VLAN Trunks
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