VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked
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So, thats how the N4000 is setup, see any issues? VLAN2 in top image has int 4 (Te3) set to T, for tagged traffic (anything I plug in will have vlan 2 set in the NIC). [First image].
Second image shows Te/1/1/1, which is LAG port. Its set to general to pass all vlans. (I think). Image 3 shows Po1.
Image 4 shows Interface 3 switch 1, which is also set to General.
Image 5 shows default vLAN. Te3 is 'u'. So anything plugged in to te3, if not set to vLAN 2 should be in U on vlan1?
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@Jimmy9008 said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
Second image shows Te/1/1/1, which is LAG port. Its set to general to pass all vlans. (I think). Image 3 shows Po1.
LAG is not named Te1/1/1, it's an ordinary port (could be a member of a LAG group).
Look under Link Aggregation.
Or activate the freakin ssh port
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Thats the LAG page. So unit 1, Te1/1 is LAG1. Unit 2, Te1/1 is LAG1 (both N4000). Then on the N3000 it has the same where Unit1 Te/1 and Unit2 Te/1 are LAG1. Traffic passes over these perfectly for vlan1.
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@Jimmy9008 said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
Thats the LAG page. So unit 1, Te1/1 is LAG1. Unit 2, Te1/1 is LAG1 (both N4000). Then on the N3000 it has the same where Unit1 Te/1 and Unit2 Te/1 are LAG1. Traffic passes over these perfectly for vlan1.
Perfect, then goto VLAN, VLAN members and select vlan 2. The click so you get vlan 2 on LAG 1.
Now the LAG 1 will pass VLAN 2 as well. -
@Pete-S said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
@Jimmy9008 said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
Thats the LAG page. So unit 1, Te1/1 is LAG1. Unit 2, Te1/1 is LAG1 (both N4000). Then on the N3000 it has the same where Unit1 Te/1 and Unit2 Te/1 are LAG1. Traffic passes over these perfectly for vlan1.
Perfect, then goto VLAN, VLAN members and select vlan 2. The click so you get vlan 2 on LAG 1.
Now the LAG 1 will pass VLAN 2 as well.Click Te1/1/1 on vlan2 to say 'U'?
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@Jimmy9008 said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
@Pete-S said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
@Jimmy9008 said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
Thats the LAG page. So unit 1, Te1/1 is LAG1. Unit 2, Te1/1 is LAG1 (both N4000). Then on the N3000 it has the same where Unit1 Te/1 and Unit2 Te/1 are LAG1. Traffic passes over these perfectly for vlan1.
Perfect, then goto VLAN, VLAN members and select vlan 2. The click so you get vlan 2 on LAG 1.
Now the LAG 1 will pass VLAN 2 as well.Click Te1/1/1 on vlan2 to say 'U'?
No, further down, where it says LAG and then shows you the LAG groups.
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@Pete-S said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
@Jimmy9008 said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
@Pete-S said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
@Jimmy9008 said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
Thats the LAG page. So unit 1, Te1/1 is LAG1. Unit 2, Te1/1 is LAG1 (both N4000). Then on the N3000 it has the same where Unit1 Te/1 and Unit2 Te/1 are LAG1. Traffic passes over these perfectly for vlan1.
Perfect, then goto VLAN, VLAN members and select vlan 2. The click so you get vlan 2 on LAG 1.
Now the LAG 1 will pass VLAN 2 as well.Click Te1/1/1 on vlan2 to say 'U'?
No, further down, where it says LAG and then shows you the LAG groups.
I think I see this now. I have made the changed remote, will test tomorrow when in the office. Will update how I got on.
I set LAG1 on vLAN2 to 'U', should it be 'T'?
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Im guessing 'U' is fine. As I want vLAN2 to pass traffic where the device has already set vlan2 in its NIC. If the LAG is set to 'T', all traffic will be set to vlan2, right? Even when from vLan1/default...
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@Jimmy9008 said in VLAN on Dell N4064 Stacked:
Im guessing 'U' is fine. As I want vLAN2 to pass traffic where the device has already set vlan2 in its NIC. If the LAG is set to 'T', all traffic will be set to vlan2, right? Even when from vLan1/default...
I think it's better to tag every vlan in both ends. Then you can be certain traffic ends up on the same vlan on the other switch stack.