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Table Of Contents
Virtual Link Trunking (VLT)
Dell Networking OS supports virtual link trunking (VLT).
Topics:
Overview
VLT Terminology
Configure Virtual Link Trunking
RSTP Configuration
PVST+ Configuration
mVLT Configuration Example
PIM-Sparse Mode Configuration Example
Additional VLT Sample Configurations
Troubleshooting VLT
Specifying VLT Nodes in a PVLAN
Configuring a VLT VLAN or LAG in a PVLAN
Proxy ARP Capability on VLT Peer Nodes
Configuring VLAN-Stack over VLT
Configure BFD in VLT Domain
Overview
VLT allows physical links between two chassis to appear as a single virtual link to the network core.
VLT reduces the role of spanning tree protocols (STPs) by allowing link aggregation group (LAG) terminations on two separate
distribution or core switches, and by supporting a loop-free topology. (To prevent the initial loop that may occur prior to VLT
being established, use a spanning tree protocol. After VLT is established, you may use rapid spanning tree protocol (RSTP) to
prevent loops from forming with new links that are incorrectly connected and outside the VLT domain.)
VLT peer devices have independent management planes. A chassis interconnect trunk between the VLT chassis maintains
synchronization of L2/L3 control planes across the two VLT peers. The chassis interconnect trunk uses 10GE or 40GE user
ports on the chassis.
VLT provides Layer 2 multipathing, creating redundancy through increased bandwidth, enabling multiple parallel paths between
nodes and load-balancing traffic where alternative paths exist.
A separate backup link maintains heartbeat messages across an out-of-band management network. The backup link ensures that
node failure conditions are correctly detected and are not confused with failures of the chassis interconnect trunk. VLT ensures
that local traffic on a chassis does not traverse the chassis interconnect trunk and takes the shortest path to the destination via
directly attached links.
Virtual link trunking offers the following benefits:
Allows a single device to use a LAG across two upstream devices.
Eliminates STP-blocked ports.
Provides a loop-free topology.
Uses all available uplink bandwidth.
Provides fast convergence if either the link or a device fails.
Optimized forwarding with virtual router redundancy protocol (VRRP).
Provides link-level resiliency.
Assures high availability.
As shown in the following example, VLT presents a single logical Layer 2 domain from the perspective of attached devices that
have a virtual link trunk terminating on separate chassis in the VLT domain. However, the two VLT chassis are independent
Layer2/Layer3 (L2/L3) switches for devices in the upstream network. L2/L3 control plane protocols and system management
features function normally in VLT mode. Features such as VRRP and internet group management protocol (IGMP) snooping
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