Re: crossover or straight cable?

2001-01-18 Thread Tony van Ree
or crossover - a couple of weeks ago? -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Yonkerbonk Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2000 12:47 AM To: sean; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: crossover or straight cable?

RE: crossover or straight cable?

2001-01-17 Thread Sampy Ren
ago? -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Yonkerbonk Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2000 12:47 AM To: sean; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: crossover or straight cable? A trunk port is simply a port that has traffic from more than

RE: crossover or straight cable?

2001-01-17 Thread Lowell Sharrah
PROTECTED] Subject: Re: crossover or straight cable? A trunk port is simply a port that has traffic from more than one VLAN running over it. It is a function of the software to combine and split the data. That has nothing to do with how the cabling is done. If you have a trunk running

RE: crossover or straight cable?

2001-01-17 Thread Tony van Ree
- a couple of weeks ago? -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Yonkerbonk Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2000 12:47 AM To: sean; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject:Re: crossover or straight cable? A trunk port is simply

RE: crossover or straight cable?

2001-01-17 Thread John Nemeth
On May 3, 7:42pm, Sampy Ren wrote: } } The rule to follow about cross-over or straight } cabling confusion is this : } } If you are connecting same layer devices, use a } cross-over cable (as in switch to a switch-layer 2 to } layer 2 or a router to a router -layer 3 to layer 3). } } If you

Re: crossover or straight cable?

2001-01-17 Thread J Roysdon
PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Yonkerbonk Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2000 12:47 AM To: sean; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: crossover or straight cable? A trunk port is simply a port that has traffic from more than one VLAN running over it. It is a

Re: crossover or straight cable?

2000-12-29 Thread Talib
Rule of thumb: Use a straight cable when connecting a DCE to a DTE. And a cross-over when connecting a DTE to a DTE or a DCE to a DCE. Shabbir S. Talib MCSE, CNE, CCNA sean wrote: Hi, I am just wondering... does trunking use crossover or straight cable? Thanks

Re: crossover or straight cable?

2000-12-28 Thread Yonkerbonk
A trunk port is simply a port that has traffic from more than one VLAN running over it. It is a function of the software to combine and split the data. That has nothing to do with how the cabling is done. If you have a trunk running from switch to switch, it will be crossover. If you have a trunk

RE: crossover or straight cable?

2000-12-28 Thread Chuck Larrieu
: crossover or straight cable? A trunk port is simply a port that has traffic from more than one VLAN running over it. It is a function of the software to combine and split the data. That has nothing to do with how the cabling is done. If you have a trunk running from switch to switch

Re: crossover or straight cable?

2000-12-27 Thread D. J. Jones
Straight cable. ""sean"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message 92e71h$qg7$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:92e71h$qg7$[EMAIL PROTECTED]... Hi, I am just wondering... does trunking use crossover or straight cable? Thanks _ FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:

Re: crossover or straight cable?

2000-12-27 Thread Tony van Ree
Would it not depend on what you are connecting to. For example from a switch port to another switch port both the ports would be the same signalling therefore a cross-over would be required. From a switch to a router the ports a different a straight cable should do fine. What we a trying to

Re: crossover or straight cable?

2000-12-27 Thread sean
Tony, Are you saying that, to connect "trunk" ports between switches, crossover cable is required? I know for "switch" ports that's the case, I am wondering if it is true for trunk as well. Tks _ FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: