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Can we have multiple VLANs going to a different router interface?
Router with Sub-Interfaces. Instead, there exists a way for multiple VLANs to terminate on a single router interface. That method is to create a Sub-Interface. A Sub-Interface allows a single Physical interface to be split up into multiple virtual sub-interfaces, each of which terminate their own VLAN.
How would you connect multiple switches together so they share VLAN information and interfaces?
For multiple VLANs on multiple switches to be able to communicate via a single link between the switches, you must use a process called trunking — trunking is the technology that allows information from multiple VLANs to be carried over a single link between switches.
How do I connect two switches with VLANs?
Create the VLANs:
- Open a web browser.
- In the address bar of the web browser, type the IP address of the switch and press Enter.
- Type the admin password of the switch and click Login.
- Go to Switching – VLAN – Advanced – VLAN Configuration.
- In the VLAN ID field, type the ID of the VLAN you wish to create and click Add.
How to configure Cisco switch with multiple VLANs?
I am new to the Cisco world and am trying to configure a switch with 2 different vlans on multiple ports. Example: G1/0/1 is Vlan 1, while G1/0/5 is Vlan 4. So Vlan 1 must be applied to ports 1,7,10-13, 15,16 ect…
Is it possible to route VLANs to different subnets?
VLANs, in their simplest form, are simple to configure and associate with their respective ports. You mentioned that this is a L3 switch, configure some switched virtual interfaces (SVI), put the VLANs on different subnets, and route between the VLANs. Sure you can do this!
Can a router support more than one VLAN?
Only this would allow Internet access for all the four VLANs. In case this is a common consumer/SOHO/ISP provided router, these don’t support any VLAN, so this connection resp, the port must be run untagged (ie. for the VLAN 1, PVID 1). 2018-08-14 08:20 AM 2018-08-14 08:20 AM
Is there best practice for connecting router to switch?
The second option is to connect multiple cables between the router and the switch and setup each port/cable to pass individual VLANs/networks between the router and the switch. Pros: Each VLAN/network has dedicated 1 Gb link. Cons: Uses multiple ports on switch and router. Is there a best practice regarding this situation?