[c-nsp] Cisco Layer 3 Switch Recommendation
Andy Dills
andy at xecu.net
Fri Nov 12 12:17:47 EST 2004
On Fri, 12 Nov 2004, Scott Weeks wrote:
>
>
> On Fri, 12 Nov 2004, Hudson Delbert J Contr 61 CS/SCBN wrote:
>
> : i dont remember who stated that 'switchs do l3 and routers do L2.
> :
> : wrong!!!
>
>
> The person that said that was doing tongue-in-cheek w/o putting a smiley
> face a the end of the email. I am pretty sure randy knows a little bit
> about the differences in LAN switching and routing. Just a little... :-)
>
> c'mon, it was fun for a while, but this is getting silly. For the new-b
> folks, just think of the functionality of the various *parts* of the box.
> A router segments an address space and forwards packets between them. A
> LAN switch broadcasts frames to every node within one of those segmented
> address spaces. If performance becomes an issue, talk to the SE of the
> vendor about what you're trying to do, not the marketing person. Leave it
> to the mgmt folks to talk to the marketing droids. They speak the same
> language.
It's even easier in my mind; this thread is two more posts away from being
ridiculous:
1) Something that can shuttle packets between multiple interfaces on layer
2 is a switch.
2) Something that can shuttle packets between multiple interfaces on layer
3 is a router.
3) Something that can shuttle packets between multiple interfaces on
either layer 2 or layer 3 is thus both a switch and a router, and can be
referred to by either term.
Don't let marketing get in the way of simple logic.
Andy
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Andy Dills
Xecunet, Inc.
www.xecu.net
301-682-9972
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