Deleting 802.1q groups from a port, Deleting 802.1q groups from a port -18 – Alcatel Carrier Internetworking Solutions Omni Switch/Router User Manual

Page 448

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Deleting 802.1Q Groups from a Port

Page 16-18

Deleting 802.1Q Groups from a Port

802.1Q groups for both 10/100 and Gigabit Ethernet ports can be deleted using the

das

command. The procedure is slightly different in each case.

To delete an

802.1Q

group from a 10/100 port using single spanning tree, use the

das

command, as shown:

das <slot>/<port> <instance> <groupId>

where

<slot>

is the slot number of the module on the switch,

<port>

is the port number where

the service was created,

<instance>

is the identifier for the service on this port, and

<groupId>

is the number of the group that the port belongs to. For example, to delete an

802.1Q

service

for group 2, instance 1 on port 5 of slot 2, enter:

das 2/5 1 2

To delete

802.1Q

groups from a Gigabit port or 10/100 ports using multiple spanning tree,

enter the

das

command, as shown:

das

<slot>/<port> <instance>

where

<slot>

is the slot number of the module on the switch,

<port>

is the port number where

the service was created, and

<instance>

is the identifier for the service on this port. For exam-

ple, to delete

802.1Q

service instance 1 on port 5 of slot 2, enter:

das 2/5 1

In either case, a message will appear, confirming the delete operation:

802.1Q service deleted for Group ID 3 on 3/9 (slot/Port)

Important Notes

You must delete X802.1Q groups in the same order on
both ends of the link. For example, if you delete
groups 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 on the local switch, you must
delete the same five groups in the same order on the
remote switch. If groups are not deleted in this manner,
X802.1Q packets will not be routed correctly.

To delete

802.1Q

support over OmniChannel, you must

first delete the

802.1Q

service before you delete the

OmniChannel.

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