I have just started reading about devices on different VLAN's communicating
with eachother via a Router.

The thing I find odd (page 190/191 in Karen Webb's book) is the following:

Three (3) VLAN's are configured on the first switch, and one (1) VLAN is
configured on the second switch.

The first switch has three physical connections to the router, which makes
sense, but the second switch has three physical connections to the router
too, which doesn't make sense (to me at least).

The way I see it, is that a VLAN would be (in theory) similar to a physical
LAN, so if I change the three (3) VLAN's on one switch to three switches
with one VLAN each, I would have one physical connection from each switch to
the router, and one physical connection from the second, or in this case the
fourth switch to the router.

I know that I will probably know the answer to this if I just finish the
chapter, but I hate not being sure about the information that the rest of
the information is related to.

Can someone clarify that for me?

Thanks,

Ole

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 Ole Drews Jensen
 Systems Network Manager
 CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
 RWR Enterprises, Inc.
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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