Configuring vlans, Vlan overview, Configuring vlans" on – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

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Configuring VLANs

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Configuring VLANs

This chapter describes how to configure VLANs, including port-based

VLANs, protocol-based VLANs, double-tagged VLANs, subnet-based VLANs,

and Voice VLANs.
The topics covered in this chapter include:

VLAN Overview
Default VLAN Behavior
Configuring VLANs (Web)
Configuring VLANs (CLI)
VLAN Configuration Examples

VLAN Overview

By default, all switchports on a PowerConnect

M6220/M6348/M8024/M8024-k switch are in the same broadcast domain.

This means when one host connected to the switch broadcasts traffic, every

device connected to the switch receives that broadcast. All ports in a

broadcast domain also forward multicast and unknown unicast traffic to the

connected host. Large broadcast domains can result in network congestion,

and end users might complain that the network is slow. In addition to latency,

large broadcast domains are a greater security risk since all hosts receive all

broadcasts.
Virtual Local Area Networks (VLANs) allow you to divide a broadcast domain

into smaller, logical networks. Like a bridge, a VLAN switch forwards traffic

based on the Layer 2 header, which is fast, and like a router, it partitions the

network into logical segments, which provides better administration, security,

and management of multicast traffic.
Network administrators have many reasons for creating logical divisions, such

as department or project membership. Because VLANs enable logical

groupings, members do not need to be physically connected to the same

switch or network segment. Some network administrators use VLANs to

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