Dell PowerEdge FX2 Dell PowerEdge FN I/O Aggregator Configuration Guide 9.6(0 - Page 98

Displaying VLAN Membership, Adding an Interface to a Tagged VLAN, Codes: * - Default VLAN

Page 98 highlights

Command Syntax vlan untagged {vlan-id} Command Mode Purpose INTERFACE Add the interface as an untagged member of one or more VLANs, where: vlan-id specifies an untagged VLAN number. Range: 2-4094 If you configure additional VLAN membership and save it to the startup configuration, the new VLAN configuration takes place immediately. Dell Networking OS Behavior: When two or more server-facing ports with VLAN membership are configured in a LAG based on the NIC teaming configuration in connected servers learned via LACP, the resulting LAG is a tagged member of all the configured VLANs and an untagged member of the VLAN to which the port with the lowest port ID belongs. For example, if port 0/3 is an untagged member of VLAN 2 and port 0/4 is an untagged member of VLAN 3, the resulting LAG consisting of the two ports is an untagged member of VLAN 2 and a tagged member of VLAN 3. Displaying VLAN Membership To view the configured VLANs, enter the show vlan command in EXEC privilege mode: Dell#show vlan Codes: * - Default VLAN, G - GVRP VLANs, R - Remote Port Mirroring VLANs, P Primary, C - Community, I - Isolated O - Openflow Q: U - Untagged, T - Tagged x - Dot1x untagged, X - Dot1x tagged o - OpenFlow untagged, O - OpenFlow tagged G - GVRP tagged, M - Vlan-stack, H - VSN tagged i - Internal untagged, I - Internal tagged, v - VLT untagged, V - VLT tagged NUM * 1 Dell# Status Description Inactive Q Ports U Te 0/1-8 NOTE: A VLAN is active only if the VLAN contains interfaces and those interfaces are operationally up. In the above example, VLAN 1 is inactive because it does not contain any interfaces. The other VLANs listed contain enabled interfaces and are active. In a VLAN, the shutdown command stops Layer 3 (routed) traffic only. Layer 2 traffic continues to pass through the VLAN. If the VLAN is not a routed VLAN (that is, configured with an IP address), the shutdown command has no affect on VLAN traffic. Adding an Interface to a Tagged VLAN The following example shows you how to add a tagged interface (Te 0/2) to the VLANs. Enter the vlan tagged command to add interface Te 0/2 to VLANs 2 - 4, which is as shown below. Enter the show config command to verify that interface Te 0/2 is a tagged member of the VLANs. Dell(conf-if-te-0/2)#vlan tagged ? VLAN-RANGE Comma/Hyphen separated VLAN ID set Dell(conf-if-te-0/2)#vlan tagged 2,3-4 Dell(conf-if-te-0/2)#show config ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 0/2 mtu 12000 98 Interfaces

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Command Syntax
Command Mode
Purpose
vlan untagged {
vlan-id
}
INTERFACE
Add the interface as an untagged member of
one or more VLANs, where:
vlan-id
specifies an untagged VLAN number.
Range: 2-4094
If you configure additional VLAN membership and save it to the startup configuration, the new VLAN
configuration takes place immediately.
Dell Networking OS Behavior:
When two or more server-facing ports with VLAN membership are
configured in a LAG based on the NIC teaming configuration in connected servers learned via LACP, the
resulting LAG is a tagged member of all the configured VLANs and an untagged member of the VLAN to
which the port with the lowest port ID belongs. For example, if port 0/3 is an untagged member of VLAN
2 and port 0/4 is an untagged member of VLAN 3, the resulting LAG consisting of the two ports is an
untagged member of VLAN 2 and a tagged member of VLAN 3.
Displaying VLAN Membership
To view the configured VLANs, enter the show vlan command in EXEC privilege mode:
Dell#show vlan
Codes: * - Default VLAN, G - GVRP VLANs, R - Remote Port Mirroring VLANs, P -
Primary, C - Community, I - Isolated
O - Openflow
Q: U - Untagged, T - Tagged
x - Dot1x untagged, X - Dot1x tagged
o - OpenFlow untagged, O - OpenFlow tagged
G - GVRP tagged, M - Vlan-stack, H - VSN tagged
i - Internal untagged, I - Internal tagged, v - VLT untagged, V - VLT tagged
NUM
Status
Description
Q Ports
*
1
Inactive
U Te 0/1-8
Dell#
NOTE:
A VLAN is active only if the VLAN contains interfaces and those interfaces are operationally
up. In the above example, VLAN 1 is inactive because it does not contain any interfaces. The other
VLANs listed contain enabled interfaces and are active. In a VLAN, the
shutdown
command stops
Layer 3 (routed) traffic only. Layer 2 traffic continues to pass through the VLAN. If the VLAN is not a
routed VLAN (that is, configured with an IP address), the shutdown command has no affect on VLAN
traffic.
Adding an Interface to a Tagged VLAN
The following example shows you how to add a tagged interface (Te 0/2) to the VLANs.
Enter the
vlan tagged
command to add interface Te 0/2 to VLANs 2 - 4, which is as shown below.
Enter the
show config
command to verify that interface Te 0/2 is a tagged member of the VLANs.
Dell(conf-if-te-0/2)#vlan tagged ?
VLAN-RANGE
Comma/Hyphen separated VLAN ID set
Dell(conf-if-te-0/2)#vlan tagged 2,3-4
Dell(conf-if-te-0/2)#show config
!
interface TenGigabitEthernet 0/2
mtu 12000
98
Interfaces