It all depends on whether the hosts in the subnet are supposed to be able
to talk. Private vlans are used to separate things not to connect them
together. Can you give us the requirements exactly?
From:
Johnny B CCIE <jbccie_at_gmail.com>
To:
groupstudy <ccielab_at_groupstudy.com>
Date:
11/14/2009 10:03 AM
Subject:
Re: 3 vlans and a problem
Sent by:
<nobody_at_groupstudy.com>
So far 2 ccies have come to the same conclusion of private vlans maybe
I was not clear enough with the question but I reworded my query very
closely to the original question. I am not asking questions I do not
already have an answer for by the way. I merely am starting a review
of things I want to know perfectly before my trip to the lab.
I suppose we can use private vlans to apply the same subnet mask but
we would have achieved the exact opposite of the desired outcome for
this question. So private vlans will achieve the the lab requirement
to allow all three vlans to use the same subnet however 0 points will
be awarded for the task. Maybe there will be points awarded for
re-grade or maybe not. Anyone want to try again?
On Sat, Nov 14, 2009 at 1:16 AM, Johnny B CCIE <jbccie_at_gmail.com> wrote:
> Let's say I have 3 vlans (10, 20, and 30).
> Let's say I have a lab requirement to configure all three vlans to use
> the same subnet: 172.16.10.0/24 (for each vlan).
>
> What options are available to make these three vlans appear to be in
> the same subnet?
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Received on Sat Nov 14 2009 - 19:00:52 ART
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