Users Guide

202 Network Administration: Spanning Tree and LAG
FILE LOCATION: C:\Users\gina\Desktop\Checkout_new\Dell Astute\User
Guide\Dell_Astute_Network_Admin_STP.fm
DELL CONFIDENTIAL – PRELIMINARY 8/9/16 - FOR PROOF ONLY
Private VLAN Host
— The port is an isolated port
Current Reserved VLAN
— Displays the VLAN currently designated
as the reserved VLAN.
Reserve VLAN for Internal Use
(1-4094)
— Enter the VLAN that will
be used when assigning IP Address on a port, or select
None
.
PVID
— Assigns a VLAN ID to untagged packets. The possible VLAN
IDs are 1-4095. VLAN 4095 is defined as per standard and industry
practice, as the discard VLAN. Packets classified to this VLAN are
dropped.
VLAN List
Enter the VLAN(s) to which this LAG belongs.
Click
Add
/Remove
to move the LAG to the VLAN list together with
its type.
NOTE: In Access mode, a port can only be a member in a single VLAN, so before
adding an access port to the VLAN, the VLAN the port is currently a member
in should be manually removed (by selecting it from the VLAN list and clicking
the remove button).
Membership
— Packet tagging on VLAN. The possible options are:
Tagged
— The LAG is a member of a VLAN. All packets
forwarded to the LAG are tagged. The packets contain VLAN
information.
Untagged
— The LAG is a member of a VLAN. Packets forwarded
to the LAG are untagged.
Forbidden
— The LAG is denied membership to a VLAN.
Frame Type
— Packet type accepted by the LAG. The possible options
are:
Admit All
— Tagged and untagged packets are both accepted by
the LAG.
Admit Tagged Only
— Only tagged packets are accepted by the
LAG.
Admit Untagged Only
— Only untagged packets are accepted on
the LAG.
Ingress Filtering
— Enable/disable Ingress filtering by the LAG.
Ingress filtering discards packets that are destined to VLANs of which
the specific LAG is not a member.