Cisco Systems 3560 Manual De Usuario

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16-4
Catalyst 3560 Switch Software Configuration Guide
OL-8553-06
Chapter 16      Configuring VTP
Understanding VTP
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MD5 digest VLAN configuration, including maximum transmission unit (MTU) size for each 
VLAN.
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Frame format
VTP advertisements distribute this VLAN information for each configured VLAN:
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VLAN IDs (ISL and IEEE 802.1Q)
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VLAN name
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VLAN type
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VLAN state
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Additional VLAN configuration information specific to the VLAN type
VTP Version 2
If you use VTP in your network, you must decide whether to use Version 1 or Version 2. By default, 
VTP operates in Version 1.
VTP Version 2 supports these features that are not supported in Version 1:
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Token Ring support—VTP Version 2 supports Token Ring Bridge Relay Function (TrBRF) and 
Token Ring Concentrator Relay Function (TrCRF) VLANs. For more information about Token 
Ring VLANs, see the 
.
  •
Unrecognized Type-Length-Value (TLV) support—A VTP server or client propagates 
configuration changes to its other trunks, even for TLVs it is not able to parse. The unrecognized 
TLV is saved in NVRAM when the switch is operating in VTP server mode.
  •
Version-Dependent Transparent Mode—In VTP Version 1, a VTP transparent switch inspects VTP 
messages for the domain name and version and forwards a message only if the version and domain 
name match. Because VTP Version 2 supports only one domain, it forwards VTP messages in 
transparent mode without inspecting the version and domain name.
  •
Consistency Checks—In VTP Version 2, VLAN consistency checks (such as VLAN names and 
values) are performed only when you enter new information through the CLI or SNMP. Consistency 
checks are not performed when new information is obtained from a VTP message or when 
information is read from NVRAM. If the MD5 digest on a received VTP message is correct, its 
information is accepted.
VTP Pruning
VTP pruning increases network available bandwidth by restricting flooded traffic to those trunk links 
that the traffic must use to reach the destination devices. Without VTP pruning, a switch floods 
broadcast, multicast, and unknown unicast traffic across all trunk links within a VTP domain even 
though receiving switches might discard them. VTP pruning is disabled by default.
VTP pruning blocks unneeded flooded traffic to VLANs on trunk ports that are included in the 
pruning-eligible list. Only VLANs included in the pruning-eligible list can be pruned. By default, 
VLANs 2 through 1001 are pruning eligible switch trunk ports. If the VLANs are configured as 
pruning-ineligible, the flooding continues. VTP pruning is supported with VTP Version 1 and Version 2.