Flow control, Virtual lans (vlans), Class of service – Enterasys Networks VH-2402S User Manual

Page 25: Port trunking

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Product Overview 11

Flow Control

Flow control allows you to manage network traffic during congestion

periods and to prevent the loss of packets when port buffer thresholds are
exceeded. Flow control also serves to deny access to additional traffic

that could add to a congestion condition. The VH-2402S switch supports

flow control per the IEEE 802.3x standard. Note that flow control is
disabled on all ports by default but can be enabled on a per-port basis by

using the console interface menus, the on-board Web agent, or via

SNMP. See Appendix B, “Flow Control,” for more information on this
feature.

Virtual LANs (VLANs)

VLANs allow you to connect users to a specific LAN segment regardless

of their physical location. The VH-2402S switch supports tagged VLANs

per the IEEE 802.1Q draft standard. With frame tagging, a short tag is
appended to every frame that crosses the network backbone. The tag

identifies which VLAN the frame belongs to. See Appendix B, “Virtual

LANs,” in the Management Guide for more information.

Class of Service

Class of Service support allows you to assign a higher priority to selected

traffic passing through the switch. The VH-2402S switch supports Class

of Service attributes per the IEEE 802.1p standard using a priority
queuing mechanism. This feature ensures that traffic during congestion

periods will not interfere with traffic assigned a higher priority. Traffic

assigned a lower priority is subject to discard when memory is in short
supply. See Appendix C, “Class of Service,” in the Management Guide for

more information.

Port Trunking

Port trunking allows you to combine ports into an aggregate connection
between VH-2402S switches. Besides balancing the load across each

port in the trunk, the additional ports provide redundancy by taking over

the load if a port in the trunk should fail. The VH-2402S allows up to four
ports of the same media type to be joined together as a trunk. Up to four

port trunks on a single switch, or 12 for an entire stack, can be configured.

RJ-45 ports must be selected from pre-determined port groups, and
100Mbps fiber ports must be on the same module, but 1000Mbps module

ports can be on any switch in the stack.

If flow control is desired for one port, it is recommended that
it be enabled on all ports. However, note that flow control
should not be used if a port is connected to a hub. Also, be
aware that when interconnecting high-speed LANs (such as
Gigabit Ethernet) and low-speed LANs, flow control can cause
traffic from the high-speed LAN to be blocked for all other
ports on the switch.

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