Seems to work fine with me, without any declared interface. Make sure your actual trunk port is "up". This is a config snippet from one of my SRX240s:
ge-0/0/0 { unit 0 { family ethernet-switching { port-mode trunk; vlan { members [ vlan-10 vlan-99 ]; } } } vlan { unit 10 { family inet { address 10.20.0.1/30; } } unit 99 { family inet { address 10.20.0.5/30; } } } vlans { vlan-10 { vlan-id 10; l3-interface vlan.10; } vlan-99 { vlan-id 99; l3-interface vlan.99; } } chr...@clgr01-fw03> show vlans Name Tag Interfaces default 1 None vlan-10 10 ge-0/0/0.0* vlan-99 99 ge-0/0/0.0* chr...@clgr01-fw03> - Chris. On 2010-04-08, at 7:32 AM, Morten Isaksen wrote: > If I delete the interface section in the vlan stanza then the vlan is down. > > /Morten > > On Thu, Apr 8, 2010 at 3:23 PM, Chris Kawchuk <juniperd...@gmail.com> wrote: >> Do not include the "ge-0/0/3" in each of your VLAN statements; as that >> designates that port to be an access port per se. >> >> You just need to have this: >> >> vlans { >> bgp { >> vlan-id 12; >> l3-interface vlan.12; >> } >> lan { >> vlan-id 10; >> l3-interface vlan.10; >> } >> wan { >> vlan-id 11; >> l3-interface vlan.11; >> } >> } >> >> JunOS assumes that you have some trunk ports... somewhere... (as you have >> declared under the [interfaces ge-0/0/3] stanza) for these VLANs if there's >> no "untagged ports" associated with them. >> >> Regards, >> >> - Chris. _______________________________________________ juniper-nsp mailing list juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp