HP 445946-001 User Manual

Page 107

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Basic IP routing

107

For example, consider the following topology migration:

Figure 14

Router legacy network

In this example, a corporate campus has migrated from a router-centric topology to a faster, more

powerful, switch-based topology. As is often the case, the legacy of network growth and redesign has left

the system with a mix of illogically distributed subnets.
This is a situation that switching alone cannot cure. Instead, the router is flooded with cross-subnet

communication. This compromises efficiency in two ways:

Routers can be slower than switches. The cross-subnet side trip from the switch to the router and back

again adds two hops for the data, slowing throughput considerably.

Traffic to the router increases, increasing congestion.

Even if every end-station could be moved to better logical subnets (a daunting task), competition for

access to common server pools on different subnets still burdens the routers.
This problem is solved by using HP 10GbE switch with built-in IP routing capabilities. Cross-subnet LAN

traffic can now be routed within the switches with wire speed Layer 2 switching performance. This not

only eases the load on the router but saves the network administrators from reconfiguring each and every

end-station with new IP addresses.

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