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Port-based vlan overview – Allied Telesis AT-S62 User Manual

Page 388

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Chapter 20: Tagged and Port-based Virtual LANs

Section V: Virtual LANs

388

Port-based VLAN Overview

As explained in the VLAN Overview on page 386, a VLAN consists of a
group of ports on one or more Ethernet switches that form an
independent traffic domain. Traffic generated by the end nodes of a
VLAN remains within the VLAN and does not cross over to the end nodes
of other VLANs unless there is an interconnection device, such as a
router or Layer 3 switch.

A port-based VLAN is a group of ports on a Fast Ethernet Switch that
form a logical Ethernet segment. Each port of a port-based VLAN can
belong to only one VLAN at a time.

A port-based VLAN can have as many or as few ports as needed. The
VLAN can consist of all the ports on an Ethernet switch, or just a few
ports. A port-based VLAN can also span switches and consist of ports
from multiple Ethernet switches.

Note

The AT-8524M switch is preconfigured with one port-based VLAN.
All ports on the switch are members of this VLAN, called the
Default_VLAN.

The parts that make up a port-based VLAN are:

❑ VLAN name

❑ VLAN Identifier

❑ Untagged ports

❑ Port VLAN Identifier

VLAN Name

To create a port-based VLAN, you must give it a name. The name should
reflect the function of the network devices that are be members of the
VLAN. Examples include Sales, Production, and Engineering.

VLAN Identifier

Each VLAN in a network must have a unique number assigned to it. This
number is called the VLAN identifier (VID). This number uniquely
identifies a VLAN in the switch and the network.

If a VLAN consists only of ports located on one physical switch in your
network, you assign it a VID different from all other VLANs in your
network.