Netgear GS110TP GS108T/ GS110TP Smart Switch Software Administration Manual - Page 84

VLANs, VLAN Configuration

Page 84 highlights

GS108T and GS110TP Smart Switch Software Administration Manual VLANs Adding Virtual LAN (VLAN) support to a Layer 2 switch offers some of the benefits of both bridging and routing. Like a bridge, a VLAN switch forwards traffic based on the Layer 2 header, which is fast, and like a router, it partitions the network into logical segments, which provides better administration, security and management of multicast traffic. By default, all ports on the switch are in the same broadcast domain. VLANs electronically separate ports on the same switch into separate broadcast domains so that broadcast packets are not sent to all the ports on a single switch. When you use a VLAN, users can be grouped by logical function instead of physical location. Each VLAN in a network has an associated VLAN ID, which appears in the IEEE 802.1Q tag in the Layer 2 header of packets transmitted on a VLAN. An end station may omit the tag, or the VLAN portion of the tag, in which case the first switch port to receive the packet may either reject it or insert a tag using its default VLAN ID. A given port may handle traffic for more than one VLAN, but it can only support one default VLAN ID. From the VLAN link, you can access the following pages: • VLAN Configuration on page 17 • VLAN Membership Configuration on page 19 • Port VLAN ID Configuration on page 20 VLAN Configuration Use the VLAN Configuration page to define VLAN groups stored in the VLAN membership table. The GS108T and GS110TP each support up to 64 VLANs. Three VLANs are created by default: • VLAN 1 is the default VLAN of which all ports are members. • VLAN 2 is for voice traffic. • VLAN 3 is for Auto-Video traffic. To display the VLAN Configuration page, lick Switching VLAN  Basic  VLAN Configuration. Chapter 3: Configuring Switching Information | 17

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Chapter 3:
Configuring Switching Information
|
17
GS108T and GS110TP Smart Switch Software Administration Manual
VLANs
Adding Virtual LAN (VLAN) support to a Layer 2 switch offers some of the benefits of both
bridging and routing. Like a bridge, a VLAN switch forwards traffic based on the Layer 2
header, which is fast, and like a router, it partitions the network into logical segments, which
provides better administration, security and management of multicast traffic.
By default, all ports on the switch are in the same broadcast domain. VLANs electronically
separate ports on the same switch into separate broadcast domains so that broadcast
packets are not sent to all the ports on a single switch. When you use a VLAN, users can be
grouped by logical function instead of physical location.
Each VLAN in a network has an associated VLAN ID, which appears in the IEEE 802.1Q tag
in the Layer 2 header of packets transmitted on a VLAN. An end station may omit the tag, or
the VLAN portion of the tag, in which case the first switch port to receive the packet may
either reject it or insert a tag using its default VLAN ID. A given port may handle traffic for
more than one VLAN, but it can only support one default VLAN ID.
From the VLAN link, you can access the following pages:
VLAN Configuration
on page
17
VLAN Membership Configuration
on page
19
Port VLAN ID Configuration
on page
20
VLAN Configuration
Use the VLAN Configuration page to define VLAN groups stored in the VLAN membership
table. The GS108T and GS110TP each support up to 64 VLANs. Three VLANs are created
by default:
VLAN 1 is the default VLAN of which all ports are members.
VLAN 2 is for voice traffic.
VLAN 3 is for Auto-Video traffic.
To display the VLAN Configuration page, lick
Switching
VLAN
Basic
VLAN
Configuration
.