IP Configuration
Overview
343 Cisco 500 Series Managed Switch Administration Guide
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Layer 3 IP Addressing
In Layer 3 system mode, the device can have multiple IP addresses. Each IP 
address can be assigned to specified ports, LAGs, or VLANs. These IP addresses 
are configured in the IPv4 Interface and IPv6 Interfaces pages in Layer 3 system 
mode. This provides more network flexibility than the Layer 2 system mode, in 
which only a single IP address can be configured. Operating in Layer 3 system 
mode, the device can be reached at all its IP addresses from the corresponding 
interfaces. 
A predefined, default route is not provided in Layer 3 system mode. To remotely 
manage the device, a default route must be defined. All DHCP-assigned default 
gateways are stored as default routes. In addition, you can manually define default 
routes. This is defined in the IPv4 Static Routes and IPv6 Routes pages.
All the IP addresses configured or assigned to the device are referred to as 
Management IP addresses in this guide.
If the pages for Layer 2 and Layer 3 are different, both versions are displayed.
Loopback Interface
Overview
The loopback interface is a virtual interface whose operational state is always up. 
If the IP address that is configured on this virtual interface is used as the local 
address when communicating with remote IP applications, the communication will 
not be aborted even if the actual route to the remote application was changed.
The operational state of a loopback interface is always up. You define an IP 
address  (either IPv4 or IPv6) on it and use this IP address as the local IP address 
for IP communication with remote IP applications. Communication remains intact 
as long as the remote applications can be reached from any one of the switch's 
active (non-loopback) IP interfaces.   On the other hand, if the IP address of an IP 
interface is used in communicating with remote applications, the communication 
will be terminated when the IP interface is down.
A loopback interface does not support bridging; it cannot be a member of any 
VLAN, and no layer 2 protocol can be enabled on it.
The IPv6 link-local interface identifier is 1. 
When the switch is in Layer 2 system mode, the following rules are supported:
• Only one loopback interface is supported.