6
M
ANAGING
THE
VLAN
VLAN Overview
To manage an Ethernet switch remotely through Telnet or the built-in Web server,
the switch need to be assigned an IP address, and make sure that a route exists
between the user and the switch. For the Switch 4210, only the management
VLAN interface can be assigned an IP address.
The management VLAN interface of a switch can obtain an IP address in one of
the following three ways:
■
Through the command used to configure IP address
■
Through BOOTP (In this case, the switch operates as a BOOTP client.)
■
Through dynamic host configuration protocol (DHCP) (In this case, the switch
operates as a DHCP client)
The three ways of obtaining an IP address cannot be configured at the same time.
That is, the latest IP address obtained causes the previously IP address to be
released. For example, if you assign an IP address to a VLAN interface by using the
corresponding commands and then apply for another IP address through BOOTP
(using the
ip address bootp-alloc
command), the former 0IP address will be
released, and the final IP address of the VLAN interface is the one obtained
through BOOTP.
n
For details of DHCP, refer to the DHCP module.
Static Route
A static route is configured manually by an administrator. You can make a network
with relatively simple topology to operate properly by simply configuring static
routes for it. Configuring and using static routes wisely helps to improve network
performance and can guarantee bandwidth for important applications.
The disadvantages of static route lie in that: When a fault occurs or the network
topology changes, static routes may become unreachable, which in turn results in
network failures. In this case, manual configurations are needed to recover the
network.
Default Route
The switch uses the default route when it fails to find a matching entry in the
routing table:
■
If the destination address of a packet fails to match any entry in the routing
table, the switch uses the default route;
■
If no default route exists and the destination address of the packet is not in the
routing table, the packet is discarded, and an ICMP destination unreachable
message is returned to the source.
The default route can be configured through a static route and exists in the
routing table as a route destined to the network 0.0.0.0 (with the mask 0.0.0.0).
Summary of Contents for Switch 4210 9-Port
Page 22: ...20 CHAPTER 1 CLI CONFIGURATION ...
Page 74: ...72 CHAPTER 3 CONFIGURATION FILE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 84: ...82 CHAPTER 5 VLAN CONFIGURATION ...
Page 96: ...94 CHAPTER 8 IP PERFORMANCE CONFIGURATION ...
Page 108: ...106 CHAPTER 9 PORT BASIC CONFIGURATION ...
Page 122: ...120 CHAPTER 11 PORT ISOLATION CONFIGURATION ...
Page 140: ...138 CHAPTER 13 MAC ADDRESS TABLE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 234: ...232 CHAPTER 17 802 1X CONFIGURATION ...
Page 246: ...244 CHAPTER 20 AAA OVERVIEW ...
Page 270: ...268 CHAPTER 21 AAA CONFIGURATION ...
Page 292: ...290 CHAPTER 26 DHCP BOOTP CLIENT CONFIGURATION ...
Page 318: ...316 CHAPTER 29 MIRRORING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 340: ...338 CHAPTER 30 CLUSTER ...
Page 362: ...360 CHAPTER 33 SNMP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 368: ...366 CHAPTER 34 RMON CONFIGURATION ...
Page 450: ...448 CHAPTER 39 TFTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 451: ......
Page 452: ...450 CHAPTER 39 TFTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 470: ...468 CHAPTER 40 INFORMATION CENTER ...
Page 496: ...494 CHAPTER 44 DEVICE MANAGEMENT ...