I would suggest you to use a multihomed PC with two
NIC,connect your NIC'S TO THE TWO VLANS respectively and enable IP forwarding
between the NIC'S,But this will allow all host from VLAN-1 to communicate with
VLAN-2 and vice-versa.
If you want have a control on the hosts communicating from
VLAN-1 and VLAN-2,Then you can install a firewall on the same multihomed
PC.
I feel this could be a better solution than going for a
additional router.
Thanks
Thangavel ----- Original Message -----
From: Russell Lusignan
Newsgroups: groupstudy.cisco
Sent: Tuesday, October 24, 2000 9:43 AM
Subject: Re: ISL Trunk on a 2500 There are no FE interfaces that are avaiable for
the 2500's.. if you want to route between the VLANs, the easiest way is to
connect a router to each VLAN via the Ethernet interface, connect those 2
routers together with a back-to-back DCE/DTE cable on the serial interfaces.
Enable a routing protocol and assuming you have numbered your subnets properly,
then anything on those two vlans can be routed...
You could even hook the 3rd router to a 3rd vlan
and connect it's serial port to one of the other 2500s... then you can router 3
subnets between 3 routers..
Hope that helps
Russ...
|
- ISL Trunk on a 2500 Juan Blanco
- Re: ISL Trunk on a 2500 Russell Lusignan
- RE: ISL Trunk on a 2500 Adam Hickey
- RE: ISL Trunk on a 2500 Boo Kheng Khoo
- Re: ISL Trunk on a 2500 Greg Reaume
- thangs