Hi James
a) You could trunk one port of the switch to your router and handle on your
router
all necessary inter-vlan traffic (often done)
search on CCO for inter-vlan to find some sample configs for your job. You
might
only face a problem with this approach due to the limited bandwith on the
trunked
port, if you have mainly inter-vlan traffic. maybe monitoring bandwith with
mrtg
(via snmp) on that port would be a good idea.
b) you can buy a l3 switch with is able to route inter-vlan traffic
internally
regards
arie
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: James Caasi [mailto:jamesky@hotmail.com]
Gesendet: Montag, 22. Juli 2002 08:12
An: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
Betreff: [nsp] Help with VLAN
Hello,
We are going to implement VLAN mainly to separate the broadcast
traffic from one segment to another.
We have existing Cisco 2620 (one FastE port) and Cisco layer 2
switches. We have office users on one segment and some production machines
on another.
Should I need a layer 3 switch for this connected after the router? Or
I only need the router to separate the two segments (using VLAN
configuration) on the layer 2 Cisco switches?
TIA,
James
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