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3Com 3824 - Creating New VLANs; VLANs: Tagged and Untagged Membership

3Com 3824
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66 CHAPTER 8: SETTING UP VIRTUAL LANS
Figure 17 Two VLANs connected via a router
Creating New VLANs If you want to move a port from the Default VLAN to another VLAN, you
must first define information about the new VLAN on your Switch.
VLANs: Tagged and
Untagged
Membership
Your Switch supports 802.1Q VLAN tagging, a system that allows traffic
for multiple VLANs to be carried on a single physical (backbone) link.
When setting up VLANs you need to understand when to use untagged
and tagged membership of VLANs. Quite simply, if a port is in a single
VLAN it can be an untagged member, but if the port needs to be a
member of multiple VLANs, tagged membership must be defined.
Typically endstations (for example, clients) will be untagged members of
one VLAN, while inter-Switch connections will be tagged members of all
VLANs.
The IEEE Std 802.1Q-1998 defines how VLANs operate within an open
packet-switched network. An 802.1Q compliant packet carries additional
information that allows a Switch to determine to which VLAN the port
belongs. If a frame is carrying the additional information, it is known as
tagged.
To carry multiple VLANs across a single physical (backbone) link, each
packet must be tagged with a VLAN identifier so that the Switches can

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