RE: Quick Vlan question [7:49533]

2002-07-24 Thread Rik Guyler
PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Quick Vlan question [7:49533] =?iso-8859-1?q?maine=20dude?= wrote: > > Hi, > > If I have two Vlans and want to route between them using an external > router, but the router has only 10mb ports, how can it be done? I > can't use ISL or 802.1q bec

RE: Quick Vlan question [7:49533]

2002-07-24 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer
=?iso-8859-1?q?maine=20dude?= wrote: > > Hi, > > If I have two Vlans and want to route between them using an > external router, > but the router has only 10mb ports, how can it be done? I can't > use ISL or 802.1q because it isn't supported on 10mb/s ports, > correct? Does every Vlan need a sepa

RE: Quick Vlan question [7:49533]

2002-07-24 Thread Michael Williams
Well, here's the deal. What's the reason for the VLANs? Since each of the PCs in each VLAN are on a different IP subnet, it's possible to just combine all of the PCs into a single VLAN, then setup the router interface with two IP addresses (one for each IP subnet). If your reason for the VLA

RE: Quick Vlan question [7:49533]

2002-07-24 Thread Michael Witte
ISL is not supported on 10mbs interfaces. You need the ISL header so that you retain the VLAN information. If you had a 100mbs interface is would look something like this. This would set up int fa0/0 as a trunk and it would be trunking VLAN 1,2,3. int fa0/0.1 encapsulation isl 1 Ip address 10