Avaya 882 Manuel D’Utilisation

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6-2
User Guide for the Avaya P580 and P882 Multiservice Switches, v6.1
Chapter 6
Advantages with VLANs:
Segment traffic and usage patterns in a manner similar to creating 
subnets and segments in traditional networks.
Reduce the cost of equipment moves, upgrades, and other changes.
Simplify network administration.
Create logical work groups for users who share the same system 
resources.
Users not required to share the same physical location.
Reduce the need for routing to achieve higher network performance 
and reduced costs.
Control or filter communication among broadcast domains.
What is a VLAN?
The Avaya Multiservice Switch has the ability to create separate logical 
LANs on the same physical device. These logical segments are referred to 
as Virtual LANs (VLANs).VLANs are typically groups of users with 
similar job functionality (i.e. sales, marketing, engineering etc.) and share 
common resources. VLANs are not constrained by their physical location 
and can communicate as if they were on a common LAN. VLAN members 
can reside on single or multiple ports on one or more media modules on a 
switch, or on different switches. VLANs are limited broadcast domains, 
meaning all members of a VLAN receive every broadcast packet seen by 
members of the same VLAN, but not packets sent by members of a different 
VLAN. A router is required when communicating between different 
VLANs.
Port Based VLANS
The Avaya Multiservice switch is a Port Based VLAN architecture. VLAN 
membership is defined by groups of switch ports. When a VLAN is created 
three types of information is configured for that VLAN, the VLAN name, 
the VLAN Identifier or VLAN ID, and the switch ports assigned to that 
VLAN. VLAN assignment of a packet is based on a global VLAN ID. 
Regardless of any name you assign to a VLAN, the switch looks only at the 
VLAN ID number to determine a packet’s VLAN destination. 
For example, ports 1, 2, and 3 on a module are members of VLAN A, ports 
4, 5, and 6 on another module are also members of VLAN A. Traffic is 
forwarded through the switch to all ports that are members of VLAN A.