RE: Associating routed port with vlan

From: simon hart (simon.hart@btinternet.com)
Date: Mon Apr 18 2005 - 17:11:37 GMT-3


Lee,

You cannot associate a routed port with a vlan. In order to get a vlan to
route out via a routed port you will have to create an SVI for the vlan in
question

Simon

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of Chad
Hintz
Sent: 18 April 2005 20:51
To: Lee Donald; 'bi.s'; 'Ccielab@Groupstudy. Com'
Subject: RE: Associating routed port with vlan

Put an Ip address on the routed port that is in the same vlan as the one you
want to associate to.

HTH,

Chad

Lee Donald <Lee.Donald@t-systems.co.uk> wrote:
The 2 switches are trunked, with router 3 in switch 1, and the routed
interface on sw2.

How would I associate fa0/15 on switch2 with vlan 28?

-----Original Message-----
From: bi.s [mailto:bi.s@gmx.net]
Sent: Monday, April 18, 2005 7:40 PM
To: Lee Donald
Subject: Re: Associating routed port with vlan

Lee Donald wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have router 3 with an eth interface 162.1.38.3/24 and this is in
> vlan 28. Then I have a routed interface on the other cat3550 that is
> 162.1.38.8/24 How can I configure this routed interface to be in vlan
> 28? What associates the routed interface with a vlan?
>

hi,

actually it's pretty straight forward. you would configure the first switch
like you always would and the second switch like you would configure a
router.

r3 (e0/0) --- (f0/3) sw1 (f0/8) ---- ---- f0/15 sw2

sw1:

in f0/3
sw acc vl 28

int f0/8
sw acc vl 28

sw2:

in f0/15
no sw
ip add 162.1.38.2/24

hth
/b



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