Cisco Systems 3750E Webcam User Manual


  Open as PDF
of 1236
 
13-26
Catalyst 3750-E and 3560-E Switch Software Configuration Guide
OL-9775-02
Chapter 13 Configuring VLANs
Configuring VLAN Trunks
Load Sharing Using STP Path Cost
You can configure parallel trunks to share VLAN traffic by setting different path costs on a trunk and
associating the path costs with different sets of VLANs, blocking different ports for different VLANs.
The VLANs keep the traffic separate and maintain redundancy in the event of a lost link.
In Figure 13-4, Trunk ports 1 and 2 are configured as 100BASE-T ports. These VLAN path costs are
assigned:
VLANs 2 through 4 are assigned a path cost of 30 on Trunk port 1.
VLANs 8 through 10 retain the default 100BASE-T path cost on Trunk port 1 of 19.
VLANs 8 through 10 are assigned a path cost of 30 on Trunk port 2.
VLANs 2 through 4 retain the default 100BASE-T path cost on Trunk port 2 of 19.
Step 13
Repeat Steps 7 through 11on Switch A for a second port in the switch
or switch stack.
Step 14
Repeat Steps 7 through 11on Switch B to configure the trunk ports that
connect to the trunk ports configured on Switch A.
Step 15
show vlan When the trunk links come up, VTP passes the VTP and VLAN
information to Switch B. Verify that Switch B has learned the VLAN
configuration.
Step 16
configure terminal Enter global configuration mode on Switch A.
Step 17
interface gigabitethernet1/ 0/1 Define the interface to set the STP port priority, and enter interface
configuration mode.
Step 18
spanning-tree vlan 8-10 port-priority 16 Assign the port priority of 16 for VLANs 8 through 10.
Step 19
exit Return to global configuration mode.
Step 20
interface gigabitethernet1/0/2 Define the interface to set the STP port priority, and enter interface
configuration mode.
Step 21
spanning-tree vlan 3-6 port-priority 16 Assign the port priority of 16 for VLANs 3 through 6.
Step 22
end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 23
show running-config Verify your entries.
Step 24
copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.
Command Purpose