Chapter 6: Static Port Trunking
94
Overview
A port trunk is an economical way for you to increase the bandwidth
between the Ethernet switch and another networking device, such as a
network server, router, workstation, or another Ethernet switch. A port
trunk is a group of ports that have been grouped together to function as
one logical path. A port trunk increases the bandwidth between the switch
and another network device and is useful in situations where a single
physical link between the devices is insufficient to handle the traffic load.
A static port trunk consists of two to eight ports on the switch that function
as a single virtual link between the switch and another device. A static port
trunk improves performance by distributing the traffic across multiple ports
between the devices and enhances reliability by reducing the reliance on a
single physical link.
A static trunk is easy to configure. You designate the ports on the switch
that are in the trunk and the AT-S112 Management software on the switch
automatically groups them together.
The example in Figure 30 illustrates a static port trunk of four links
between two AT-GS950/16PS switches.
Figure 30. Static Port Trunk Example
Static Trunk
Summary of Contents for AT-GS950/16PS
Page 12: ...Figures 12...
Page 14: ...List of Tables 14...
Page 18: ...Preface 18...
Page 20: ...20...
Page 52: ...Chapter 2 System Configuration 52...
Page 54: ...54...
Page 92: ...Chapter 5 Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol 92...
Page 102: ...Chapter 6 Static Port Trunking 102...
Page 118: ...Chapter 8 Port Mirroring 118...
Page 140: ...Chapter 11 IGMP Snooping 140...
Page 174: ...Chapter 14 GVRP 174...
Page 186: ...Chapter 15 Quality of Service and Cost of Service 186...
Page 188: ...188...
Page 216: ...Chapter 17 SNMPv3 216...
Page 244: ...Chapter 18 Access Control Configuration 244...
Page 282: ...Chapter 21 Security 282...
Page 288: ...Chapter 22 Power Over Ethernet PoE 288...
Page 289: ...289 Chapter 23...
Page 310: ...Chapter 24 LLDP 310...
Page 322: ...322...
Page 334: ...Chapter 26 Software Configuration Updates 334...
Page 346: ...Chapter 28 Rebooting the AT GS950 16PS 346...
Page 368: ...Appendix A MSTP Overview 368...
Page 386: ...Appendix B AT GS950 16PS Default Parameters 386...