HP (Hewlett-Packard) 6308M-SX Switch User Manual


 
Configuring VLANs
16 - 3
Layer 2 traffic is bridged within a port-based VLAN and Layer 2 broadcasts are sent to all the ports within the
VLAN.
Layer 3 Protocol-Based VLANs
If you want some or all of the ports within a port-based VLAN to be organized according to Layer 3 protocol, you
must configure a Layer 3 protocol-based VLAN within the port-based VLAN.
You can configure each of the following types of protocol-based VLAN within a port-based VLAN. All the ports in
the Layer 3 VLAN must be in the same Layer 2 VLAN.
AppleTalk The device sends AppleTalk broadcasts to all ports within the AppleTalk protocol VLAN.
IP The device sends IP broadcasts to all ports within the IP protocol VLAN.
IPX The device sends IPX broadcasts to all ports within the IPX protocol VLAN.
DECnet The device sends DECnet broadcasts to all ports within the DECnet protocol VLAN.
NetBIOS The device sends NetBIOS broadcasts to all ports within the NetBIOS protocol VLAN.
Other The device sends broadcasts for all protocol types other than those listed above to all ports within the
VLAN.
Figure 16.2 shows an example of Layer 3 protocol VLANs configured within a Layer 2 port-based VLAN.
Figure 16.2 Layer 3 protocol VLANs within a Layer 2 port-based VLAN
Integrated Switch Routing (ISR)
The Integrated Switch Routing (ISR) feature enables VLANs configured on routing switches to route Layer 3
traffic from one protocol VLAN or IP sub-net, IPX network, or AppleTalk cable VLAN to another. Normally, to route
traffic from one IP sub-net, IPX network, or AppleTalk cable VLAN to another, you would need to forward the traffic
to an external router. The VLANs provide Layer 3 broadcast domains for these protocols but do not in themselves
provide routing services for these protocols. This is true even of the source and destination IP sub-nets, IPX
networks, or AppleTalk cable ranges are on the same device.
ISR eliminates the need for the external router by allowing you to route between the VLANs, on the same device,
using virtual interfaces (VEs).
1
A virtual interface is a logical port on which you can configure Layer 3 routing
parameters. You configure a separate virtual interface on each VLAN that you want to be able to route from or to.
DefaultVLAN
User-configured port-basedVLAN
Protocol VLAN, IP sub-net VLAN,
IPX network VLANor AppleTalk VLAN