Dell PowerConnect 8024 User Configuration Manual page 552

Hide thumbs Also See for PowerConnect 8024:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

priority over other traffic, such as data. Administrators also use VLANs to
protect network resources. Traffic sent by authenticated clients might be
assigned to one VLAN, while traffic sent from unauthenticated clients might
be assigned to a different VLAN that allows limited network access.
When one host in a VLAN sends a broadcast, the switch forwards traffic only
to other members of that VLAN. For traffic to go from a host in one VLAN to
a host in a different VLAN, the traffic must be forwarded by a layer 3 device,
such as a router. VLANs work across multiple switches, so there is no
requirement for the hosts to be located near each other to participate in the
same VLAN.
NOTE:
PowerConnect 8000/8100-series switches support VLAN routing. When you
configure VLAN routing, the switch acts as a layer 3 device and can forward traffic
between VLANs. For more information, see "What Are VLAN Routing Interfaces?"
on page 855.
Each VLAN has a unique number, called the VLAN ID. The PowerConnect
8000/8100-series switches support a configurable VLAN ID range of 2–4093.
A VLAN with VLAN ID 1 is configured on the switch by default. VLAN 1 is
default
named
with any other VLANs that you create.
In a tagged frame, the VLAN is identified by the VLAN ID in the tag. In an
untagged frame, the VLAN identifier is the Port VLAN ID (PVID) specified
for the port that received the frame. For information about tagged and
untagged frames, see "VLAN Tagging" on page 555.
The PowerConnect 8000/8100-series switches support adding individual ports
and Link Aggregation Groups (LAGs) as VLAN members.
Figure 22-1 shows an example of a network with three VLANs that are
department-based. The file server and end stations for the department are all
members of the same VLAN.
552
Configuring VLANs
, which cannot be changed. However, you can associate names

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents