
Chapter 18
| VLAN Commands
Configuring VLAN Interfaces
– 481 –
The following figure shows VLANs 1 and 2 configured on switches A and B, with
VLAN trunking being used to pass traffic for these VLAN groups across switches
C, D and E.
Figure 3: Configuring VLAN Trunking
Without VLAN trunking, you would have to configure VLANs 1 and 2 on all
intermediate switches – C, D and E; otherwise these switches would drop any
frames with unknown VLAN group tags. However, by enabling VLAN trunking
on the intermediate switch ports along the path connecting VLANs 1 and 2,
you only need to create these VLAN groups in switches A and B. Switches C, D
and E automatically allow frames with VLAN group tags 1 and 2 (groups that
are unknown to those switches) to pass through their VLAN trunking ports.
◆
To prevent loops from forming in the spanning tree, all unknown VLANs will be
bound to a single instance (either STP/RSTP or an MSTP instance, depending on
the selected STA mode).
◆
VLAN trunking is mutually exclusive with the “access” switchport mode (see the
command). If VLAN trunking is enabled on an interface, then
that interface cannot be set to access mode, and vice versa.
◆
If both VLAN trunking and ingress filtering are disabled on an interface, packets
with unknown VLAN tags will still be allowed to enter this interface and will be
flooded to all other ports where VLAN trunking is enabled. (In other words,
VLAN trunking will still be effectively enabled for the unknown VLAN).
Example
The following example enables VLAN trunking on ports 9 and 10 to establish a path
across the switch for unknown VLAN groups:
Console(config)#interface ethernet 1/9
Console(config-if)#vlan-trunking
Console(config-if)#interface ethernet 1/10
Console(config-if)#vlan-trunking
Console(config-if)#
Summary of Contents for AS5700-54X
Page 42: ...Contents 42...
Page 44: ...Figures 44...
Page 52: ...Tables 52...
Page 54: ...Section I Getting Started 54...
Page 80: ...Chapter 1 Initial Switch Configuration Setting the System Clock 80...
Page 210: ...Chapter 6 Remote Monitoring Commands 210...
Page 358: ...Chapter 9 Access Control Lists ACL Information 358...
Page 418: ...Chapter 12 Port Mirroring Commands RSPAN Mirroring Commands 418...
Page 436: ...Chapter 15 UniDirectional Link Detection Commands 436...
Page 442: ...Chapter 16 Address Table Commands 442...
Page 506: ...Chapter 18 VLAN Commands Configuring VXLAN Tunneling 506...
Page 526: ...Chapter 19 Class of Service Commands Priority Commands Layer 3 and 4 526...
Page 544: ...Chapter 20 Quality of Service Commands 544...
Page 652: ...Chapter 22 Multicast Filtering Commands MLD Proxy Routing 652...
Page 680: ...Chapter 23 LLDP Commands 680...
Page 722: ...Chapter 24 CFM Commands Delay Measure Operations 722...
Page 732: ...Chapter 25 Domain Name Service Commands 732...
Page 790: ...Chapter 27 IP Interface Commands ND Snooping 790...
Page 1072: ...Section III Appendices 1072...
Page 1102: ...List of CLI Commands 1102...
Page 1115: ......
Page 1116: ...AS5700 54X AS6700 32X E032016 ST R02 149100000198A...