
oboehmer at cisco
Jul 2, 2008, 2:38 AM
Post #2 of 2
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Re: Multiple 802.1q subinterfaces with the same vlan underthesame physical interface
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luismi <mailto:asturluismi[at]gmail.com> wrote on Wednesday, July 02, 2008 11:23 AM: > What I was thinking in assign different subinterfaces (from different > physical interfaces) to the same vlan in the same chassis. > > I think that the router will be able to manage that configuration, for > example: fa0/0.1 and fa1/0.1 working in different vrfs but in the same > vlan, with different IP address from the same subnet. > > Is that correct? yes, this will work on most platforms. The 6500/7600 uses system-wide vlans (with a few exceptions), so this won't work there.. Tom's comment on the (possibly connected) switched infrastructure still applies, but if you are "only" consolidating the router part, it should work. oli > > El mié, 02-07-2008 a las 08:22 +0200, Oliver Boehmer (oboehmer) > escribió: >> luismi <> wrote on Monday, June 30, 2008 8:15 PM: >> >>> Hi there, >>> >>> I have a dude I could solve using a lab enviroment but for several >>> reasons I don't have enought time at this momment, neither I have >>> the correct equipment here. >>> >>> I am thinking on collapse several routers configurations in new >>> equipment, deploying subinterfaces with 802.1q and VRFs. >>> >>> The situation is that for the same physical interface I would have >>> several subinterfaces, working in the same vlan but diferent vrf, >>> with also diferent ip addresses but all of them are in the same >>> subnet. >>> >>> The question is, is the router going to be enough clever to deliver >>> the packet in the correct interface? Take note that the IP address >>> use as destination in the incoming packet is not going to be ip >>> address of the interface since the router and its vrfs. >> >> This is not going to work. The router needs the vlan tag to associate >> the appropriate (sub)interface with the packet, so the vlan tag has >> to be unique on the interface (some platforms like the 6500 even ask >> for a unique tag per system). VRF association comes later and is >> based on the vrf configured on the (sub)interface. >> So if you want to consolidate multiple vlan/.1q connections, you will >> need to change vlan IDs in order to make them unique. >> >> oli _______________________________________________ cisco-nsp mailing list cisco-nsp[at]puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/
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