RuggedCom RS1600 Manual Do Utilizador

Página de 130
Chapter 4 – Configuring VLANs 
Edge And Trunk Port Types 
Each port can be configured to take on a type of Edge or Trunk.   
An Edge port attaches to a single end device (such as a PC or IED) and carries 
traffic on a single pre-configured VLAN. 
Trunk ports are part of the network and carry traffic for all VLANs between 
switches.  Trunk ports must be manually programmed with the VLANs to be 
supported.   
Forbidden Port Lists 
Each VLAN can be configured to exclude ports from membership in the VLAN.  
VLAN Based Services  
IGMP Snooping 
The Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) provides the ability for IP 
hosts and workstations to report their multicast group memberships to routers.  
The switch can “snoop” or monitor these messages in order to restrict multicast 
traffic streams to only the necessary parts of the network.  IGMP snooping is 
activated on a per-VLAN basis.  See “Chapter 7 – Configuring Multicast Filtering” 
for information on configuring IGMP snooping. 
VLAN Applications 
Traffic Domain Isolation 
VLANs are most often used for their ability to restrict traffic flows between 
groups of devices.   
Unnecessary broadcast traffic can be restricted to the VLAN that requires it.  
Broadcast storms in one VLAN need not affect users in other VLANs. 
Hosts on one VLAN can be prevented from accidentally or deliberately assuming 
the IP address of a host on another VLAN.  
The use of creative bridge filtering and multiple VLANs can carve seemingly 
unified IP subnets into multiple regions policed by different security/access 
policies. 
Multi-VLAN hosts can assign different traffic types to different VLANs. 
RuggedCom 
27