Allied Telesis AT-S63 User Manual

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Chapter 27: Internet Protocol Version 4 Packet Routing
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Section VII: Routing
Non-routing Command Example
This example illustrates how to assign an IP address to a switch by 
creating just one interface. This example is appropriate in cases where 
you want to implement the management functions described in “Routing 
Interfaces and Management Features” on page 318 b
ut without IPv4 
packet routing. This section is also appropriate for the AT-9400 Layer 2+ 
Switches, which do not support packet routing.
The first step is to select the VLAN and subnet on the switch for the 
interface. The appropriate VLAN for the master switch of an enhanced 
stack is the common VLAN of the switches in the stack. The appropriate 
VLAN for remote management or for remote access to a network server is 
the VLAN where the remote device is located.
Let’s assume for the purposes of this example that the switch will be 
remotely managed from a Telnet, SSH, or web browser management 
workstation on the network. Consequently, the appropriate VLAN would 
be the VLAN on the switch where the remote management workstation is 
located. Assume that the VID of the VLAN is 12 and the IP address of the 
subnet of the VLAN is 149.44.55.0 with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0. 
The following command assigns an interface to the VLAN. It identifies the 
VLAN by its VID of 12 and assigns it the interface number 0. The interface 
is given the IP address 149.44.55.22 to make it a member of the subnet:
add ip interface=vlan12-0 ipaddress=149.44.55.22 
netmask=255.255.255.0
In order to manage the switch remotely, the interface must be designated 
as the local interface so that the management software monitors the 
subnet for management packets. Here is the command for designating the 
interface as the local interface:
set ip local interface=vlan12-0
As the final part of the example, assume that the management software on 
the switch must communicate with a network device, such as 
management workstation, syslog server, or RADIUS server, that is not a 
member of the same subnet as the interface. For this, you need to define a 
default route. The route will specify the next hop to reaching the remote 
subnet. The switch will use the default route whenever it needs to send a 
management packet to a remote network device that resides on a different 
subnet than its local interface.
The next hop in the route must specify the IP address of a routing interface 
on a router in the network. Furthermore, the IP address of the routing 
interface must be a member of the same subnet as the interface on the 
switch.