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Catalyst 3750-E and 3560-E Switch Software Configuration Guide
OL-9775-08
Chapter 13 Configuring VLANs
Configuring Extended-Range VLANs
Extended-Range VLAN Configuration Guidelines
Follow these guidelines when creating extended-range VLANs:
•
VLAN IDs in the extended range are not saved in the VLAN database and are not recognized by
VTP unless the switch is running VTP version 3.
•
You cannot include extended-range VLANs in the pruning eligible range.
•
In VTP version 1 and 2, a switch must be in VTP transparent mode when you create extended-range
VLANs. If VTP mode is server or client, an error message is generated, and the extended-range
VLAN is rejected. VTP version 3 supports extended VLANs in server and transparent modes.
•
For VTP version 1 or 2, you can set the VTP mode to transparent in global configuration mode. See
the
“Configuring VTP Mode” section on page 14-11
. You should save this configuration to the
startup configuration so that the switch boots up in VTP transparent mode. Otherwise, you lose the
extended-range VLAN configuration if the switch resets. If you create extended-range VLANs in
VTP version 3, you cannot convert to VTP version 1 or 2.
•
STP is enabled by default on extended-range VLANs, but you can disable it by using the
no
spanning-tree vlan
vlan-id
global configuration command. When the maximum number of
spanning-tree instances are on the switch, spanning tree is disabled on any newly created VLANs.
If the number of VLANs on the switch exceeds the maximum number of spanning-tree instances,
we recommend that you configure the IEEE 802.1s Multiple STP (MSTP) on your switch to map
multiple VLANs to a single spanning-tree instance. For more information about MSTP, see
Chapter 19, “Configuring MSTP.”
•
Each routed port on the switch creates an internal VLAN for its use. These internal VLANs use
extended-range VLAN numbers, and the internal VLAN ID cannot be used for an extended-range
VLAN. If you try to create an extended-range VLAN with a VLAN ID that is already allocated as
an internal VLAN, an error message is generated, and the command is rejected.
–
Because internal VLAN IDs are in the lower part of the extended range, we recommend that you
create extended-range VLANs beginning from the highest number (4094) and moving to the
lowest (1006) to reduce the possibility of using an internal VLAN ID.
–
Before configuring extended-range VLANs, enter the
show vlan internal usage
privileged
EXEC command to see which VLANs have been allocated as internal VLANs.
–
If necessary, you can shut down the routed port assigned to the internal VLAN, which frees up
the internal VLAN, and then create the extended-range VLAN and re-enable the port, which
then uses another VLAN as its internal VLAN. See the
“Creating an Extended-Range VLAN
with an Internal VLAN ID” section on page 13-13
.
•
Although the switch or switch stack supports a total of 1005 (normal-range and extended-range)
VLANs, the number of routed ports, SVIs, and other configured features affects the use of the switch
hardware. If you try to create an extended-range VLAN and there are not enough hardware resources
available, an error message is generated, and the extended-range VLAN is rejected.
•
In a switch stack, the whole stack uses the same running configuration and saved configuration, and
extended-range VLAN information is shared across the stack.
Creating an Extended-Range VLAN
You create an extended-range VLAN in global configuration mode by entering the
vlan
global
configuration command with a VLAN ID from 1006 to 4094. The extended-range VLAN has the default
Ethernet VLAN characteristics (see
) and the MTU size, private VLAN, and RSPAN
configuration are the only parameters you can change. See the description of the
vlan
global
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