12-5
Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3120 for HP Software Configuration Guide
OL-12247-01
Chapter 12 Configuring VLANs
Configuring Normal-Range VLANs
Caution
You can cause inconsistency in the VLAN database if you attempt to manually delete the vlan.dat file.
If you want to modify the VLAN configuration, use the commands described in these sections and in the
command reference for this release. To change the VTP configuration, see
Chapter 13, “Configuring
VTP.”
You use the interface configuration mode to define the port membership mode and to add and remove
ports from VLANs. The results of these commands are written to the running-configuration file, and you
can display the file by entering the show running-config privileged EXEC command.
You can set these parameters when you create a new normal-range VLAN or modify an existing VLAN
in the VLAN database:
•
VLAN ID
•
VLAN name
•
VLAN type (Ethernet, Fiber Distributed Data Interface [FDDI], FDDI network entity title [NET],
TrBRF, or TrCRF, Token Ring, Token Ring-Net)
•
VLAN state (active or suspended)
•
Maximum transmission unit (MTU) for the VLAN
•
Security Association Identifier (SAID)
•
Bridge identification number for TrBRF VLANs
•
Ring number for FDDI and TrCRF VLANs
•
Parent VLAN number for TrCRF VLANs
•
Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) type for TrCRF VLANs
•
VLAN number to use when translating from one VLAN type to another
Note
This section does not provide configuration details for most of these parameters. For complete
information on the commands and parameters that control VLAN configuration, see the command
reference for this release.
These sections contain normal-range VLAN configuration information:
•
Token Ring VLANs, page 12-6
•
Normal-Range VLAN Configuration Guidelines, page 12-6
•
VLAN Configuration Mode Options, page 12-7
•
Saving VLAN Configuration, page 12-7
•
Default Ethernet VLAN Configuration, page 12-8
•
Creating or Modifying an Ethernet VLAN, page 12-9
•
Deleting a VLAN, page 12-10
•
Assigning Static-Access Ports to a VLAN, page 12-11