From: prateek reddy (prateek.reddyk@gmail.com)
Date: Sat Mar 01 2008 - 08:34:08 ARST
A routed port is the physical port that acts similar to that of port
on the router. It is configured with the layer 3 address ( IP ADDRESS
) and works at the Network layer. So it will not be under any VLAN.
And one more important thing we have to consider is unlike port on
router, we can't configure sub interfaces on the routed ports of the
Layer 3 Switch.
SVIs are the virtual layer 3 interfaces that can be configured on
multi layer switches. We use SVIs for Inter-VLAN routing. A SVI can be
associated with a single VLAN and for that VLAN we configure IP
Address of the same subnet and that IP address will be the default
gateway of the workstations in the VLAN.
The main advantage with the SVIs over routed ports is we can have
redundancy in SVIs by using more than one link under a VLAN as we will
be assinging IP Address for the VLAN in SVIs.
Cheers,
Prateek.
On 3/1/08, shady darwish <engshad.shady@gmail.com> wrote:
> need to know differences between routed port and svi ..in the way for
> connectivity and routing
>
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-- K.V.Madhu Prateek Reddy..
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