An example, How vlans ease change and movement 5-2, How vlans control broadcast traffic 5-2 – 3Com 1000 User Manual

Page 76: How vlans provide extra security 5-2, An example 5-2

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5-2

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ANAGEMENT

How VLANs Ease Change and Movement

With traditional IP networks, network administra-
tors spend much of their time dealing with moves
and changes. If users move to a different IP subnet,
the IP addresses of each endstation must be
updated manually.

With a VLAN setup, if an endstation in VLAN 1 is
moved to a port in another part of the network,
you only need to specify that the new port is in
VLAN 1. This is something that can be done auto-
matically if you have 3Com’s Transcend

®

Enterprise

Manager for Windows (v6.0 and above).

How VLANs Control Broadcast Traffic

With traditional networks, congestion can be caused
by broadcast traffic which is directed to all network
devices whether they require it or not. VLANs
increase the efficiency of your network because
each VLAN can be set up to contain only those
devices which need to communicate with each
other.

How VLANs Provide Extra Security

Devices within each VLAN can only communicate
with devices in the same VLAN. If a device in VLAN
1 needs to communicate with devices in VLAN 2,
the traffic must cross a router.

An Example

Figure 5-1

shows a network configured with three

VLANs — one for each of the departments who
access the network. The membership of VLAN 1 is
restricted to ports 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of Switch A;
membership of VLAN 2 is restricted to ports 4, 5,
6, 7 and 8 of Switch B while VLAN 3 spans both
Switches containing ports 6, 7, 8 of Switch A and 1,
2, 3 of Switch B.

In this simple example, each of these VLANs can be
seen as a broadcast domain — physical LAN seg-
ments that are not constrained by their physical
location.

Specific configurations using the Switch are shown
later in this chapter.

Figure 5-1 The concept of VLANs

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