Re: switch question

2001-01-09 Thread Dennis
you will want to turn on portfast on all the ports that are connected to single hosts on the 3500. Do not turn it on for ports connected to multiple hosts (hubs, other switches, routers.) this is going to allow the port to bypass listening and learning and go directly to forwarding traffic. If

Re: Switch question

2000-07-09 Thread Tom Holbrook
Leongwoo- Indeed a port can belong to many VLANs in theory. This capability is vendor specific, though. Many ports can of course be in one VLAN. So,...port:vlan = many:many. BTW, I would recommend Perlman's book for this type of info. Cisco LAN Switching is good too. -Tom At 02:37 PM 7/9/2000

RE: Switch question

2000-07-10 Thread Rik Guyler
I have one word for you - Trunking. Think about how you setup trunking and why you do it. If you are using a "router on a stick" and you are running ISL, can't you support routing for several VLANs by using only a single router interface (with subinterfaces) connected to a single switch port? C

Re: Switch question

2000-07-11 Thread tcpipppp
It depends on the platform and software. The switches with which I am familliar (the Catalyst 1900/2820 series) support several ports within one VLAN. In terms of actual membership, a port can only be a member of only one VLAN on these switches. In the case of trunk ports, they can carry traffi

Re: Switch question

2000-07-11 Thread jeongwoo park
July 12, 2000 1:14:06 AM GMT Subject: Re: Switch question It depends on the platform and software. The switches with which I am familliar (the Catalyst 1900/2820 series) support several ports within one VLAN. In terms of actual membership, a port can only be a member of only one VLAN on these swit

RE: Switch Question [7:25704]

2001-11-08 Thread Bill Carter
Etherchannel make the link 1 logical connection. Therefore, one STP interface. If one link fails it becomes a single connection, so you are still up. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of DAGENHARDT Frank Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2001 1:04

RE: Switch Question [7:25704]

2001-11-08 Thread Mark Odette II
I could be wrong about this, but my understanding of redundancy doesn't include EtherChannel. EtherChannel's main purpose is to create a larger aggregate "pipe" between switches. The manner in which it operates might lend to the interpretation that it can be used for redundancy, but it's not a re

RE: Switch Question [7:25704]

2001-11-08 Thread juno vtv
Mark, You are correct. -junovtv Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=25714&t=25704 -- FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations