That's exactly what I was looking for, but can you tag IPX. I kept thinking
that you could only tag IP. Now that I think of it, tagging is L2, so I
could tag it, couldn't I?
Chuck wrote in message
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in the old days of vlan switching, there was
This is how I used to setup 3com 3500's. They could not do wire speed
ip/ipx if they were on the same interface. so for every layer 3 network,
you would actualy have two interfaces. Both of which would go back to the
same vlan on the core switch. of course, at layer two, all the frames are
Sounds like your novell admins just use compaq smart start and leave things
at defaults. (novell WILL destroy a network if not configured properly)
The tree is constantly updated. (putting your novell network on it's own l3
net also helps out a lot! And across WAN links? Forget it! If you
One more thing, if I can tag IP and IPX, how do I route between the 2 vlans
if one is IP and the other IPX?
Steven A. Ridder wrote in message
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That's exactly what I was looking for, but can you tag IPX. I kept
thinking
that you could only tag IP.
what?
Now you've compeltely lost me!
do you want to tunnel ipx and route to various vlans?
I mean... If you have ipx on 1 interface and ip on the other, and they are
on the same vlan, then you're done. But they won't route between the two
because they are two different protocols.
If you
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Subject: Re: ways to seperate IP and IPX traffic? [7:42855]
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2002 13:49:36 -0400
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At 01:50 PM 4/30/02, Patrick Ramsey wrote:
what?
Steven, what problem are you trying to solve?? Where are you trying to
separate this traffic? I think we may need to see a logical topology of
sorts.
Also, I don't want to sound like a broken record, but I'm still wondering
if you are trying to
will never get
there. But I just want to be sure.
Is my solution the way to go?
From: Patrick Ramsey
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: ways to seperate IP and IPX traffic? [7:42855]
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2002 13:49:36 -0400
MIME-Version: 1.0
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to add to Priscilla's comment;
locking down frame types is absolutely a must! And remember if you have two
frame types bound to any interface, in order to route, you must have both
frame types on the router interface. Otherwise only the original frame type
will get out. (which in some
not a
trivial one)
Regards,
Kent
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Steven Ridder
Sent: Tuesday, April 30, 2002 10:59 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: ways to seperate IP and IPX traffic? [7:42855]
Believe me, I've confused myself
How do you mean separate? You could use a router to separate the IP /IPX
traffic (being that IP/IPX are Layer 3, only a layer 3 device would be able
to separate them) =)
Mike W.
Steven A. Ridder wrote in message
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What are some good ways to
in the old days of vlan switching, there was serious discussion of using
vlans to separate traffic by protocol. set up ports 1,3 and 5 as IP and
ports 2,4, and 6 as IPX. More importantly, put all those renegade AppleTalk
users on their own VLAN so their traffic doesn't bother people with real
At 09:06 PM 4/29/02, Chuck wrote:
in the old days of vlan switching, there was serious discussion of using
vlans to separate traffic by protocol. set up ports 1,3 and 5 as IP and
ports 2,4, and 6 as IPX. More importantly, put all those renegade AppleTalk
users on their own VLAN so their traffic
I guess you could do a setup like that However, anymore, virtually any
device speaking IPX will also speak IP (i.e. all of our Novell servers run
dual stacks IP and IPX as well as all PCs run both IPX and IP and all of our
networked printers do both as well) kinda silly, but that's the
Priscilla Oppenheimer wrote in message
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AppleTalk traffic doesn't bother other people. AppleTalk devices don't
broadcast; they multicast, and they don't do that very often. AppleTalk
routers and servers don't ever broadcast (or multicast) service
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