Kingston Technology Kingston Fast EtheRx KNS3250/R User Manual

Page 21

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Kingston Technology Company

KNS3250/R User’s Guide - Rev. A00

16

Kingston Switch Configuration Utility

Load Balancing Method

In a multiple link trunk, the links within a trunk should have an equal amount of

trafc in order to achieve maximum efciency. Thus, some sort of load balancing

amongst the links of a trunk must be deployed. The Kingston KNS1650/R, 2450/R,

and 3250/R switches support MAC address based and port based balancing

methods. Using these methods, any packet with a trunk destination received by the

switch can be forwarded to a proper trunk port. After choosing one method, the user

must specify the relative load-balancing mapping to complete the conguration of

the trunk port load balancing.

Trunk Selection, Trunk Port Assignment

Place checkmarks in the boxes of the desired trunk and check the desired trunk port

assignments per trunk.
Trunk: A Trunk is a group of Trunk Ports grouped together.
Port Based Trunk: Each Port Based Trunk may have 2, 3, or 4 Trunk Ports.
MAC Address Based Trunk: Each MAC Address Based Trunk must contain 4

Ports.
Trunk Ports: A port assigned to a Trunk. The Trunk Ports are setup in groups of 4

and must be selected based on the groups. For example, Trunk 1 can only contain

Trunk Ports 1, 2, 3, or 4.

Load Balancing Mapping - MAC Address Based

When the switch receives a packet with a trunk destination, it will automatically

forward the packet to a trunk port based on the source MAC address (SA) and

destination MAC address (DA) of the packet. The device uses two bits from SA

and DA to map to four trunk ports.
The user can select which two bits should be used for mapping:
[1:0]

Uses bit 1 and 0 for mapping.

[3:2]

Uses bit 3 and 2 for mapping.

[5:4]

Uses bit 5 and 4 for mapping.

[7:6]

Uses bit 7 and 6 for mapping.

Each MAC Address contains 6 bytes of data, the last byte is taken from the source

MAC address (SA) and the last byte from the destination MAC address (DA). Each

byte contains 8 bits of data and the user can determine which two bits of the last

byte are used to map the trunk port. See the example on the following page:

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