SMC Networks SMC6752AL2 Manual De Usuario

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ONFIGURING
 
THE
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WITCH
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VLANs help to simplify network management by allowing you to move 
devices to a new VLAN without having to change any physical 
connections. VLANs can be easily organized to reflect departmental 
groups (such as Marketing or R&D), usage groups (such as e-mail), or 
multicast groups (used for multimedia applications such as 
videoconferencing).
VLANs provide greater network efficiency by reducing broadcast traffic, 
and allow you to make network changes without having to update IP 
addresses or IP subnets. VLANs inherently provide a high level of network 
security since traffic must pass through a configured Layer 3 link to reach a 
different VLAN.
This switch supports the following VLAN features:
Up to 255 VLANs based on the IEEE 802.1Q standard
Distributed VLAN learning across multiple switches using explicit or 
implicit tagging and GVRP protocol
Port overlapping, allowing a port to participate in multiple VLANs
End stations can belong to multiple VLANs
Passing traffic between VLAN-aware and VLAN-unaware devices 
Priority tagging 
Assigning Ports to VLANs
Before enabling VLANs for the switch, you must first assign each port to 
the VLAN group(s) in which it will participate. By default all ports are 
assigned to VLAN 1 as untagged ports. Add a port as a tagged port if you 
want it to carry traffic for one or more VLANs, and any intermediate 
network devices or the host at the other end of the connection supports 
VLANs. Then assign ports on the other VLAN-aware network devices 
along the path that will carry this traffic to the same VLAN(s), either 
manually or dynamically using GVRP. However, if you want a port on this 
switch to participate in one or more VLANs, but none of the intermediate 
network devices nor the host at the other end of the connection supports 
VLANs, then you should add this port to the VLAN as an untagged port.