k engineer.
Use the 3550 for testing..
Theo,
CSS1, CCNP
"Chuck"
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
04/28/2002 01:37 AM
Please respond to "Chuck"
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:
Subject: Re: Gigabit GBIC for 3550 [7:42680]
interesting questio
interesting question, Steve. I had been under the impression that the
software treated the stack as a single entity, thus making STP irrelevant,
but in re-reading, I see that is for management purposes.
Can't find anything in the documentation that I browsed. I'm curious because
this is something
After checking out the link, it says the GigaStack can stack up to nine
switches, but dosen't that destroy STP, as it has a 7 hop max?
--
RFC 1149 Compliant.
Get in my head:
http://sar.dynu.com
""MADMAN"" wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I think the answer is in
Not to be evasive but it depends. In some scenerios 150 heavy users could
kill the
router but then again if the users are using simple keystroke, screen update
type apps
then a couple hundred would be no problem.
Dave
"Steven A. Ridder" wrote:
> Can a FastEthernet port of a router trunk 150-
Geez...all you guys had to do was ask! ;-}
Rik
-Original Message-
From: Chuck [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, April 26, 2002 5:44 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Gigabit GBIC for 3550 [7:42680]
do great minds think alike, or what ;->
( see my response to the s
What kind of router? What kind of traffic?
I have installed quite a few 2621's doing trunking on FA0/0 (dot1q) for
inter-vlan routing with client numbers in the range you refer to. Mainly IP
traffic, some limited IPX.
Hope this helps.
Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.ph
Can a FastEthernet port of a router trunk 150-200 devices spread out over a
few VLAN's? I'm going to assume yes, but at what point to you have to go
router on a blade, generally speaking.
--
RFC 1149 Compliant.
Get in my head:
http://sar.dynu.com
""MADMAN"" wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
do great minds think alike, or what ;->
( see my response to the same question )
Chuck
P.S. happy Friday, everyone.
""MADMAN"" wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I think the answer is in here:
>
>
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/cc/pd/si/casi/ca3500xl/prodli
I think the answer is in here:
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/cc/pd/si/casi/ca3500xl/prodlit/gbic_ds.htm
Dave
Brian Zeitz wrote:
>
> If I wanted to connect 2 Cisco 3550 switches together, would I need 1
> Gigabit stacking GBIC or 2? I think I need 2 of them. I am trying to
> find out exact
I've had to do a bit of reading on this myself lately. Recently several
engineers at my place of employment were yakking about this and there is a
lot of mis-information and misunderstanding. none of us really understood
how the gigastack worked.
check out the following link:
http://www.cisco.com
If I wanted to connect 2 Cisco 3550 switches together, would I need 1
Gigabit stacking GBIC or 2? I think I need 2 of them. I am trying to
find out exactly what I need to hook together (2) 3350 (24 port) with 2
GIG ports. The part number im looking at is CIS-WS-X3500-XL, is this
all I would need?
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