RE: Suggestions welcome [7:27378]

2001-11-26 Thread chris
I have router on a stick configured between a Cisco 3600 and 4 Cisco 3548s that are trunk together and it is working OK. However, must all the 3548s have an ip address in the same subnet as vlan 1. I changed the ip address on a switch from interface vlan1 172.16.10.1/24 to vlan2 172.16.11.1/24 th

RE: Suggestions welcome [7:27378]

2001-11-26 Thread Shah Nick
Yep, the basic principle is : a VLAN is one subnet. and thats the reason there is a limitation of 254 odd hosts in one VLAN (note : this is not a theoritical limitation, but a practical one). Nick Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=27409&t=27378 ---

RE: Suggestions welcome [7:27378]

2001-11-26 Thread Jeff Smith
Chris, did you try shutting down interface vlan1 on that switch? AFAIK, you can only have 1 vlan/interface up at a time for the management interface on the 3548. Jeff >From: "chris" >Reply-To: "chris" >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: RE: Suggestions welc

RE: Suggestions welcome [7:27378]

2001-11-27 Thread Shahram Esfahani
Try clearing the ARP's after changing IP's. Shahram On Mon, 26 Nov 2001, chris wrote: > I have router on a stick configured between a Cisco 3600 and 4 Cisco 3548s > that are trunk together and it is working OK. However, must all the 3548s > have an ip address in the same subnet as vlan 1. I ch