If I had to guess, I'd say the context is something like a load balancer or such (like the older Cisco Local Director), where the L2 packets must flow 'through' the chassis.
What I'd do is have the 'real' VLAN with an SVI, and then a 'dummy' L2-only (no SVI) VLAN behind the Local Director. The servers 'live' on the dummy VLAN, and the Local Director acts as a bridge between the two. Ken Matlock Network Analyst Exempla Healthcare (303) 467-4671 [email protected] -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Marko Milivojevic Sent: Thursday, February 10, 2011 2:40 PM To: [email protected] Cc: . Subject: Re: [OSL | CCIE_RS] Unrouted VLAN On Thu, Feb 10, 2011 at 21:04, <[email protected]> wrote: > What is a Unrouted VLAN and why would you use? > Could you please give some context for the question? -- Marko Milivojevic - CCIE #18427 Senior Technical Instructor - IPexpert FREE CCIE training: http://bit.ly/vLecture Mailto: [email protected] Telephone: +1.810.326.1444 Web: http://www.ipexpert.com/ _______________________________________________ For more information regarding industry leading CCIE Lab training, please visit www.ipexpert.com _______________________________________________ For more information regarding industry leading CCIE Lab training, please visit www.ipexpert.com
