Protected Ports - Dell PowerConnect 5548P System User's Manual

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Protected Ports

Protected Port Overview
Protected ports provide Layer 2 isolation between interfaces (Ethernet ports
and LAGs) that share the same Broadcast domain (VLAN) with other
interfaces. This can be used to set up a group of ports that receive similar
services.
A protected port does not forward traffic (Unicast, Multicast, or Broadcast) to
any other protected port on the same switch.
A community is a group of protected ports. Protected ports within the same
community can forward traffic to each other.
The following types of ports can be defined:
Protected Port — Can send traffic only to uplink ports.
Community Port — A protected port that is associated with a community.
It can send traffic to other protected ports in the same community and to
uplink ports.
Uplink Port — An uplink port is an unprotected port that can send traffic
to any port.
Isolated Port — A protected port that does not belong to a community.
Port Protection is independent of all other features and configuration
settings. Two protected ports in a common VLAN cannot communicate with
each other.
Protected Port Restrictions
The following restrictions apply to protected ports:
When a protected port is placed in a LAG, it loses its protected port
attribute and takes upon itself the LAG's protection attributes. When the
port is removed from the LAG, its attributes are re-applied.
Mirrored traffic is not subject to protected ports rules.
Routing is not affected by the protected port forwarding rule, so that if a
packet enters a protected port, it can be routed by the device to another
protected port.
D E L L C O N F I D E N T I A L – P R E L I M I N A R Y 9 / 1 1 / 1 2 - F O R P R O O F O N LY
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Dell PowerConnect 55xx Systems User Guide
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