Users Guide

Command Syntax Command Mode Purpose
vlan tagged {vlan-id | vlan-
range}
INTERFACE Add the interface as a tagged member of one or
more VLANs, where:
vlan-id specifies a tagged VLAN number. Range:
2-4094
vlan-range specifies a range of tagged VLANs.
Separate VLAN IDs with a comma; specify a
VLAN range with a dash; for example, vlan
tagged 3,5-7.
To reconfigure an interface as a member of only specified untagged VLANs, enter the vlan untagged
command in INTERFACE mode:
Command Syntax Command Mode Purpose
vlan untagged {vlan-id | vlan-
range}
INTERFACE Add the interface as an untagged member of
one or more VLANs, where:
vlan-id specifies an untagged VLAN number.
Range: 2-4094
vlan-range specifies a range of untagged VLANs.
Separate VLAN IDs with a comma; specify a
VLAN range with a dash; for example, vlan
tagged 3,5-7.
When you delete a VLAN (using the no vlan vlan-id command), any interfaces assigned to the VLAN
are assigned to the default VLAN as untagged interfaces.
If you configure additional VLAN membership and save it to the startup configuration, the new VLAN
configuration is activated following a system reboot.
Dell Networking OS Behavior:When two or more server-facing ports with VLAN membership are
configured in a LAG based on the NIC teaming configuration in connected servers learned via LACP, the
resulting LAG is a tagged member of all the configured VLANs and an untagged member of the VLAN to
which the port with the lowest port ID belongs. For example, if port 0/3 is an untagged member of VLAN
2 and port 0/4 is an untagged member of VLAN 3, the resulting LAG consisting of the two ports is an
untagged member of VLAN 2 and a tagged member of VLAN 3.
Displaying VLAN Membership
To view the configured VLANs, enter the show vlan command in EXEC privilege mode:
Dell#show vlan
Codes: * - Default VLAN, G - GVRP VLANs, R - Remote Port Mirroring VLANs, P -
Primary, C -
Community, I - Isolated
Q: U - Untagged, T - Tagged
x - Dot1x untagged, X - Dot1x tagged
G - GVRP tagged, M - Vlan-stack, H - VSN tagged
110
Interfaces