Motorola 3347 User Manual

Page 108

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108

When configuring VLANs you must define how traffic needs to be for warded:

If traffic needs to be bridged between LAN and WAN you can create a single VLAN that
encompasses the WAN por t and LAN por ts.

If traffic needs to be routed then you must define four elements:

• LAN-side VLANs

• WAN-side VLANs

• Associate IP Inter faces to VLANs

• Inter-VLAN Routing Groups: configuration of routing between VLANs is done by associ-
ation of a VLAN to a Routing Group. Traffic will be routed between VLANs within a rout-
ing group. The LAN IP Ethernet Inter face can be bound to multiple LAN VLANs, but
for warding can be limited between an Ethernet LAN por t and a WAN VLAN if you properly
configure Inter-VLAN groups.

Inter-VLAN groups are also used to block routing between WAN inter faces. If each WAN
IP inter face is bound to its own VLAN and if you configure a different Inter-VLAN group
for each WAN VLAN then no routing between WAN IP inter faces is possible.

Example: to route between a VCC and all the LAN por ts, which effectively is similar to
the default configuration without any VLANs:

Create a VLAN named “VccWan” consisting of vcc1, ip-vcc1, routing-group 1

Create a VLAN named “Lan” consisting of eth0.1, eth0.2, eth0.3, eth0.4, ssid1, ssid2,
ssid3, ssid4 (etc.), ip-eth-a, routing-group 1

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