D-Link DGS-3426P Product Manual - Page 151

Port-based VLANs, VLAN Segmentation, VLAN and Trunk Groups, Protocol VLANs, Static VLAN Entry - l2

Page 151 highlights

xStack® DGS-3400 Series Layer 2 Gigabit Ethernet Managed Switch System (default) 1 5, 6, 7, 8, 21, 22, 23, 24 Engineering 2 9, 10, 11, 12 Marketing 3 13, 14, 15, 16 Finance 4 17, 18, 19, 20 Sales 5 1, 2, 3, 4 Port-based VLANs Table 3 - 1 VLAN Example - Assigned Ports Port-based VLANs limit traffic that flows into and out of switch ports. Thus, all devices connected to a port are members of the VLAN(s) the port belongs to, whether there is a single computer directly connected to a switch, or an entire department. On port-based VLANs, NICs do not need to be able to identify 802.1Q tags in packet headers. NICs send and receive normal Ethernet packets. If the packet's destination lies on the same segment, communications take place using normal Ethernet protocols. Even though this is always the case, when the destination for a packet lies on another switch port, VLAN considerations come into play to decide if the packet gets dropped by the Switch or delivered. VLAN Segmentation Take for example a packet that is transmitted by a machine on Port 1 that is a member of VLAN 2. If the destination lies on another port (found through a normal forwarding table lookup), the Switch then looks to see if the other port (Port 10) is a member of VLAN 2 (and can therefore receive VLAN 2 packets). If Port 10 is not a member of VLAN 2, then the packet will be dropped by the Switch and will not reach its destination. If Port 10 is a member of VLAN 2, the packet will go through. This selective forwarding feature based on VLAN criteria is how VLANs segment networks. The key point being that Port 1 will only transmit on VLAN 2. VLAN and Trunk Groups The members of a trunk group have the same VLAN setting. Any VLAN setting on the members of a trunk group will apply to the other member ports. NOTE: In order to use VLAN segmentation in conjunction with port trunk groups, first set the port trunk group(s), and then configure the VLAN settings. To change the port trunk grouping with VLANs already in place it is unnecessary to reconfigure the VLAN settings after changing the port trunk group settings. VLAN settings will automatically change in conjunction with the change of the port trunk group settings. Protocol VLANs The xStack® DGS -3400 Switch Series incorporates the idea of protocol-based VLANs. This standard, defined by the IEEE 802.1v standard maps packets to protocol-defined VLANs by examining the type octet within the packet header to discover the type of protocol associated with it. After assessing the protocol, the Switch will forward the packets to all ports within the protocol-assigned VLAN. This feature will benefit the administrator by better balancing load sharing and enhancing traffic classification. The Switch supports fourteen pre-defined protocols for configuration. The user may also choose a protocol that is not one of the fourteen defined protocols by properly configuring the userDefined protocol VLAN. The supported protocols for the protocol VLAN function on this switch include IP, IPX, DEC LAT, SNAP, NetBIOS, AppleTalk, XNS, SNA, IPv6, RARP and VINES. Static VLAN Entry This window is used to create static VLAN entries on the Switch. To view this window, click L2 Features > VLAN > Static VLAN Entries, as shown below. 142

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xStack
®
DGS-3400 Series Layer 2 Gigabit Ethernet Managed Switch
142
System (default)
1
5, 6, 7, 8, 21, 22, 23, 24
Engineering
2
9, 10, 11, 12
Marketing
3
13, 14, 15, 16
Finance
4
17, 18, 19, 20
Sales
5
1, 2, 3, 4
Table 3 - 1 VLAN Example – Assigned Ports
Port-based VLANs
Port-based VLANs limit traffic that flows into and out of switch ports. Thus, all devices connected to a port are members of the
VLAN(s) the port belongs to, whether there is a single computer directly connected to a switch, or an entire department.
On port-based VLANs, NICs do not need to be able to identify 802.1Q tags in packet headers. NICs send and receive normal
Ethernet packets. If the packet's destination lies on the same segment, communications take place using normal Ethernet protocols.
Even though this is always the case, when the destination for a packet lies on another switch port, VLAN considerations come into
play to decide if the packet gets dropped by the Switch or delivered.
VLAN Segmentation
Take for example a packet that is transmitted by a machine on Port 1 that is a member of VLAN 2. If the destination lies on
another port (found through a normal forwarding table lookup), the Switch then looks to see if the other port (Port 10) is a member
of VLAN 2 (and can therefore receive VLAN 2 packets). If Port 10 is not a member of VLAN 2, then the packet will be dropped
by the Switch and will not reach its destination. If Port 10 is a member of VLAN 2, the packet will go through. This selective
forwarding feature based on VLAN criteria is how VLANs segment networks. The key point being that Port 1 will only transmit
on VLAN 2.
VLAN and Trunk Groups
The members of a trunk group have the same VLAN setting. Any VLAN setting on the members of a trunk group will apply to
the other member ports.
NOTE:
In order to use VLAN segmentation in conjunction with port trunk groups, first set the
port trunk group(s), and then configure the VLAN settings. To change the port trunk grouping
with VLANs already in place it is unnecessary to reconfigure the VLAN settings after changing
the port trunk group settings. VLAN settings will automatically change in conjunction with the
change of the port trunk group settings.
Protocol VLANs
The xStack
®
DGS -3400 Switch Series incorporates the idea of protocol-based VLANs. This standard, defined by the IEEE
802.1v standard maps packets to protocol-defined VLANs by examining the type octet within the packet header to discover the
type of protocol associated with it. After assessing the protocol, the Switch will forward the packets to all ports within the
protocol-assigned VLAN. This feature will benefit the administrator by better balancing load sharing and enhancing traffic
classification. The Switch supports fourteen pre-defined protocols for configuration. The user may also choose a protocol that is
not one of the fourteen defined protocols by properly configuring the
userDefined
protocol VLAN. The supported protocols for
the protocol VLAN function on this switch include IP, IPX, DEC LAT, SNAP, NetBIOS, AppleTalk, XNS, SNA, IPv6, RARP
and VINES.
Static VLAN Entry
This window is used to create static VLAN entries on the Switch.
To view this window, click
L2 Features
>
VLAN > Static VLAN Entries
, as shown below.