Re: native vlan, trunking question [7:63309]

2003-02-19 Thread Karen E Young
A native VLAN is the VLAN that that port uses when trunking breaks down. Thats it. If you don't set it to a specific VLAN in the config, then the native VLAN will be the default vlan. On cisco, this is VLAN 1. Normally, the trunk is up and running and the native vlan doesn't come into play. Howeve

RE: native vlan, trunking question [7:63309]

2003-02-19 Thread Tangled Up in Blue
Native VLAN is the vlan which is is "untagged" with VLAN information or tags. IE, by default, VLAN 1 is untagged, meaning other devices which do not understand vlan's, can understand traffic from a vlan 1 port (for example). Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=63354&t

native vlan, trunking question [7:63309]

2003-02-18 Thread supernet
I'm confused on native vlan and trunking. Can I assign a port to a trunk (for all the vlans), then assign that port to a vlan100? Does that port belong to native vlan100? What means native vlan? Thanks. Yoshi Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=63309&t=63309 ---