Specifications
Switching delete vlan port 8-103
Software Release 2.7.3
C613-03098-00 REV A
delete vlan port
Syntax DELete VLAN={vlan-name|1..4094} POrt={port-list|ALL}
where:
■ vlan-name is a unique name from 1 to 32 characters. Valid characters are
uppercase and lowercase letters, digits, the underscore, and the hyphen.
The vlan-name cannot be a number or all.
■ port-list is a port number, range (specified as n-m), or comma-separated list
of numbers and/or ranges. Port numbers start at 1 and end at m, where m
is the highest numbered switch Ethernet port (including uplink ports).
Description This command deletes ports from the specified vlan. An untagged port can be
deleted from a VLAN when the port is still a member of a VLAN after the
deletion has occurred. If the port does not belong to a VLAN as a tagged port,
then the port is implicitly added to the default VLAN as an untagged port. It is
not possible to delete a port that belongs only to the default VLAN as an
untagged port.
If the port becomes a tagged port as a result of the deletion; that is, the port
does not belong to any VLAN as an untagged port, then the acceptable switch
parameter for the port is set to VLAN. The user is not able to change the
acceptable parameter for the port.
A tagged port can be deleted from a VLAN if the port is still a member of a
VLAN after the deletion has occurred.
If as a result of the port deletion, ports are moved from one STP to another STP,
the two affected STPs are initialised when they are presently enabled.
Previously disabled ports in the STPs are enabled.
The vlan parameter specifies the name or numerical VLAN Identifier of the
VLAN. The name is not case sensitive. The VLAN must already exist.
The port parameter specifies the ports to be deleted from the VLAN. If all is
specified, then all ports belonging to the VLAN are deleted. When the
command succeeds on a subset of the specified ports but causes errors on the
others, then the command as a whole fails and has no effect.
On the Rapier i Series switches only, a port can belong to multiple STPs when
the port is a member of more than one VLAN. If the port being deleted from
the VLAN also belongs to another STP through concurrent membership of
another VLAN, it is not removed from that VLAN or STP.
If a port belongs to a trunk group, all the ports in the trunk group must be
specified. A subset of the ports in a trunk group cannot be deleted from the
VLAN unless they are first removed from the trunk group.
A private VLAN cannot contain any private ports when an uplink is deleted
from the VLAN, because a private VLAN must always have an uplink. To
delete the uplink port or ports and any private ports from a private VLAN, use
the option port=all.
If the port is a member of a private group, you must delete all ports in the
group at once. This stops groups from having different member ports in
different VLANs.