I am not shure that understand your question right, But if question about
physical layer then yes it is a fiber optic line. At the same time it is a
metro ethernet link
2013/10/31 Blake Dunlap iki...@gmail.com
Is this an actual fiber run you control end to end, or actually a metro e
link?
Hello,
We observed problem with VTP. VTP updates does not advertise between two
switches in the same vtp domain
It seems to me that happened because the distance between switches is too
long, approximately 40km
Who ever observed the same problem?
Could distance affect on convergance of
We observed problem with VTP. VTP updates does not advertise between two
switches in the same vtp domain
It seems to me that happened because the distance between switches is too
long, approximately 40km
I strongly suspect you have a different problem.
Who ever observed the same problem?
You are probably not going to like my answer, but I would use vtp mode
transparent. I think you are sitting on a time bomb otherwise
Sent from a mobile device
On 31 Oct 2013, at 19:30, Andrey Teslenko teslenko.and...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
We observed problem with VTP. VTP
Oh my.
It's part of the VTP specification. VTP frames being sent over a distance of
20 light years will be dropped at random.
Or they are just the same as any other frame :)
Sent from some sort of iDevice.
On 31/10/2013, at 7:30 PM, Andrey Teslenko teslenko.and...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
Is this an actual fiber run you control end to end, or actually a metro e
link?
On Thu, Oct 31, 2013 at 4:39 AM, Mark Tees markt...@gmail.com wrote:
Oh my.
It's part of the VTP specification. VTP frames being sent over a distance
of 20 light years will be dropped at random.
Or they are