Deployment Guide

i - Internal untagged, I - Internal tagged, v - VLT
untagged, V - VLT tagged
NUM Status Description Q Ports
* 1 Active U Te 0/3
10 Active T Po128(Te 0/4-5)
T Te 0/1
11 Active T Po128(Te 0/4-5)
12 Active T Po128(Te 0/4-5)
T Te 0/1
13 Active T Po128(Te 0/4-5)
T Te 0/1
14 Active T Po128(Te 0/4-5)
T Te 0/1
15 Active T Po128(Te 0/4-5)
T Te 0/1
20 Active U Po128(Te 0/4-5)
U Te 0/1
Dell#
You can remove the inactive VLANs that have no member ports using the following command:
Dell#configure
Dell(conf)#no interface vlan vlan-id
vlan-id — Inactive VLAN with no member ports
You can remove the tagged VLANs using the no vlan tagged vlan-range command. You can remove the untagged VLANs
using the no vlan untagged command in the physical port/port-channel.
Port Channel Interfaces
Port channel interfaces support link aggregation, as described in IEEE Standard 802.3ad.
This section covers the following topics:
Port Channel Denition and Standards
Port Channel Benets
Port Channel Implementation
Conguration Tasks for Port Channel Interfaces
Port Channel Denition and Standards
Link aggregation is dened by IEEE 802.3ad as a method of grouping multiple physical interfaces into a single logical interface—a link
aggregation group (LAG) or port channel.
A LAG is “a group of links that appear to a MAC client as if they were a single link” according to IEEE 802.3ad. In the Dell Networking OS, a
LAG is referred to as a port channel interface.
A port channel provides redundancy by aggregating physical interfaces into one logical interface. If one physical interface goes down in the
port channel, another physical interface carries the trac.
Port Channel Benets
A port channel interface provides many benets, including easy management, link redundancy, and sharing.
Port channels are transparent to network congurations and can be modied and managed as one interface. For example, you congure
one IP address for the group and that IP address is used for all routed trac on the port channel.
Interfaces
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