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Key Concepts
161
Terminology
The following terms apply to VLANs:
■
Default VLAN
— The predefined port-based VLAN interface on your
system that always uses VID 1, the protocol type unspecified, and the
name Default. The default VLAN also initially includes all of the bridge
ports without any tagging, but you can modify the bridge ports and
tag status of the default VLAN. If you maintain the default VLAN and
you install a new module, the system adds all ports that are associated
with the new module to the default VLAN. See “The Default VLAN”
for more detailed information.
■
VLAN origin
— Whether the VLAN was created in one of the
following ways:
■
Statically
— The VLAN display shows an origin of static if you
define the VLAN.
■
Dynamically
— The VLAN display shows an origin of GVRP if the
system learned the VLAN dynamically through GVRP.
■
Router
— The VLAN display shows an origin of router if you have
defined a router port IP interface on a single bridge port. When
you define a router port IP interface, you must place the system in
allClosed mode. This removes any allOpen VLANs and re-creates
the default VLAN. See Chapter 11 for more information on
defining router port IP interfaces.
■
VLAN mode
— A system-wide mode that determines whether data
with a unicast MAC address can be forwarded between configured
VLANs (allOpen). In allClosed mode, each VLAN has its own address
table and data cannot be forwarded between VLANs (although data
can still be
routed
between VLANs). The default VLAN mode is
allOpen. See “VLAN allOpen or allClosed Mode” for more
information.
■
Ignore STP mode
— A per-VLAN mode that determines whether the
system ignores the blocking Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) mode for the
ports of a designated VLAN. (One instance of STP runs on the system,
but you can disable it for each VLAN.) Ignore STP mode is only
available in allClosed mode; it is disabled by default. It allows the user
to select (for each VLAN) which VLANs ignore STP blocked ports. This
mode is typically used for VLANs that have router interfaces that
choose to ignore the STP state. It allows routing (or bridging) over a
port that is blocked by STP. See “Ignore STP Mode” later in this
chapter for more information.
Summary of Contents for CoreBuilder 3500
Page 44: ...44 CHAPTER 2 MANAGEMENT ACCESS ...
Page 58: ...58 CHAPTER 3 SYSTEM PARAMETERS ...
Page 86: ...86 CHAPTER 5 ETHERNET ...
Page 112: ...112 CHAPTER 6 FIBER DISTRIBUTED DATA INTERFACE FDDI ...
Page 208: ...208 CHAPTER 9 VIRTUAL LANS ...
Page 256: ...256 CHAPTER 10 PACKET FILTERING ...
Page 330: ...330 CHAPTER 12 VIRTUAL ROUTER REDUNDANCY PROTOCOL VRRP ...
Page 356: ...356 CHAPTER 13 IP MULTICAST ROUTING ...
Page 418: ...418 CHAPTER 14 OPEN SHORTEST PATH FIRST OSPF ...
Page 519: ...RSVP 519 Figure 94 Sample RSVP Configuration Source station End stations Routers ...
Page 566: ...566 CHAPTER 18 DEVICE MONITORING ...
Page 572: ...572 APPENDIX A TECHNICAL SUPPORT ...
Page 592: ...592 INDEX ...