Port Trunking; Understanding Port Trunk Groups - D-Link xStack DES-3528 series User Manual

Layer 2 managed stackable fast
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DES-3528/DES-3552 Series Layer 2 Stackable Fast Ethernet Managed Switch User Manual

Port Trunking

Understanding Port Trunk Groups

Port trunk groups are used to combine a number of ports together to make a single high-bandwidth data pipeline.
DES-3528/DES-3552 Series supports up to 8 port trunk groups with 2 to 8 ports in each group. A potential bit rate of
4400 Mbps can be achieved.
The Switch treats all ports in a trunk group as a single port. Data transmitted to a specific host (destination address)
will always be transmitted over the same port in a trunk group. This allows packets in a data stream to arrive in the
same order they were sent.
NOTE: If any ports within the trunk group become disconnected, packets intended for the
disconnected port will be load shared among the other unlinked ports of the link aggregation
group.
Link aggregation allows several ports to be grouped together and to act as a single link. This gives a bandwidth that is
a multiple of a single link's bandwidth.
Link aggregation is most commonly used to link a bandwidth intensive network device or devices, such as a server, to
the backbone of a network.
The Switch allows the creation of up to 8 link aggregation groups, each group consisting of 2 to 8 links (ports). The
aggregated links must be contiguous (they must have sequential port numbers) except the four (optional) Gigabit
Figure 3 - 30 Example of Port Trunk Group
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