Reference Guide
VLANs 347
–
VLAN List (I - Inactive Configuration)
— Enter the VLAN(s) to
which this LAG belongs, and indicate its type. The possible options are:
•
T
— Tagged. The LAG is a member of a VLAN. All packets
forwarded by the LAG are tagged. The packets contain VLAN
information.
•
U
— Untagged. The LAG is a member of a VLAN. Packets
forwarded by the LAG are untagged.
•
F
— Forbidden. The LAG is denied membership to a VLAN.
Click
Add
to move the LAG to the VLAN list together with its type.
–
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 Tag 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.
–
Native VLAN ID (1-4094)
— Enter VLAN used for untagged traffic
to trunk ports, or select
None
.
–
Multicast VLAN ID (1-4094)
— Enter VLAN used for Multicast TV
VLAN traffic on access ports, or select
None
.
–
Customer VLAN ID (1-4094)
— Enter VLAN used for customer
ports, or select
None
.
Assigning LAGs to VLAN Groups Using CLI Commands
Refer to Table 14-2 for a list of the LAG settings CLI commands.










