Making Vlan Connections - SMC Networks 6709L2 - annexe 1 Installation Manual

Tigerswitch standalone 8+2 10/100 port managed switch
Hide thumbs Also See for 6709L2 - annexe 1:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

N
P
ETWORK
LANNING

Making VLAN Connections

VLANs can be based on port groups, or each data frame can be explicitly
tagged to identify the VLAN group it belongs to. When using port-based
VLANs, ports can either be assigned to one specific group or to all groups.
Port-based VLANs are suitable for small networks. A single switch can be
easily configured to support several VLAN groups for various
organizational entities (such as Finance and Marketing).
When you expand port-based VLANs across several switches, you need to
make a separate connection for each VLAN group. This approach is,
however, inconsistent with the Spanning Tree Protocol, which can easily
segregate ports that belong to the same VLAN. When VLANs cross
separate switches, it is therefore better to use VLAN tagging. This allows
you to assign multiple VLAN groups to the "trunk" ports (that is, tagged
ports) connecting different switches.
R&D
VLAN 2
Testing
Figure 2-3. Making VLAN Connections
Note: When connecting to a switch that does not support IEEE 802.1Q
VLAN tags, use untagged ports.
2-4
M2
2
2
4
4
6
6
8
8
LK
CPU
LK/ACT
BC STM
BC STM
SPD
RX
LK/ACT
PWR
Tagged
SPD
1
3
5
7
M1
Ports
Untagged Ports
Finance
Marketing
VLAN 3
VLAN 4
4
8
2
6
1
3
5
7
Tagged Port
VLAN
unaware
switch
Finance
VLAN 3
Console
9600, 8N1
9600, 8N1
M2 1000BASE-T
M2 1000BASE-T
VLAN
aware
switch
R&D
VLAN 1
VLAN 2
Testing

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Tigerswitch smc6709l2

Table of Contents