That is a difficult question, I assume the answer you are looking for is any
router that has trunking capabilities (IE any router with FastEthernet
ability) However, Any router can support Vlans, It just may need a single
Ethernet port for every Vlan you have- The 5500 RSM is a router processor
that routes between Vlans- ultimately enabling layer 3 computability in a
(mainly) layer 2 device. The RSM is automatically trunked to the ethernet
backplane of the 5500, but otherwise it would be the same of having an
external router attached to a switch through multiple ports. One for every
Vlan( to provide inter-operability between the broadcast domains)

-----Original Message-----
From: Jason Swenson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, August 16, 2000 4:37 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Vlan Capable Router


Can someone enlighten me as to what constitutes a Vlan capable router?  

Jason

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