198
C
HAPTER
9: V
IRTUAL
LAN
S
Egress Rules
These rules determine whether the
outgoing
frame is forwarded, filtered
(dropped), or flooded; they also determine the frame’s tag status.
Although the same standard bridging rules apply to both open and
closed VLANs, they result in different behavior depending on the allOpen
mode (one address table for the system) versus allClosed mode (one
address table for each VLAN).
Standard Bridging Rules for Outgoing Frames
The frame is handled according to these bridging rules:
■
If the frame’s destination address matches an address that was
previously learned on the receive port, it is
filtered
(dropped).
■
If the frame’s destination address matches an address that was learned
on a port other than the receive port, it is
forwarded
to that port if the
receive port and transmit port are in the same VLAN or the system is in
allOpen mode.
■
If a frame with an unknown, multicast, or broadcast destination
address is received, then it is
flooded
(that is, forwarded to all ports on
the VLAN that is associated with the frame, except the port on which
it was received). Those frames assigned to the null VLAN are not
flooded to any ports because no ports are associated with the null
VLAN. See “Examples of Flooding and Forwarding Decisions” later in
this chapter.
■
If the frame’s destination address matches a MAC address of one of
the bridge’s ports, it is further processed, not forwarded immediately.
This type of frame is either a management/configuration frame (such
as a RIP update, SNMP get/set PDU, Administration Console Telnet
packet, or a Web Management Interface http packet), or it is a routed
packet. If it is a routed packet, the system performs the routing
functions described in the appropriate routing chapter (for example, IP,
OSPF, IPX, or AppleTalk).
For example, if a frame is associated with VLAN A and has a destination
address associated with VLAN B, the frame is flooded over VLAN A in
allClosed mode but forwarded untagged in allOpen mode.
Summary of Contents for CoreBuilder 3500
Page 44: ...44 CHAPTER 2 MANAGEMENT ACCESS ...
Page 58: ...58 CHAPTER 3 SYSTEM PARAMETERS ...
Page 86: ...86 CHAPTER 5 ETHERNET ...
Page 112: ...112 CHAPTER 6 FIBER DISTRIBUTED DATA INTERFACE FDDI ...
Page 208: ...208 CHAPTER 9 VIRTUAL LANS ...
Page 256: ...256 CHAPTER 10 PACKET FILTERING ...
Page 330: ...330 CHAPTER 12 VIRTUAL ROUTER REDUNDANCY PROTOCOL VRRP ...
Page 356: ...356 CHAPTER 13 IP MULTICAST ROUTING ...
Page 418: ...418 CHAPTER 14 OPEN SHORTEST PATH FIRST OSPF ...
Page 519: ...RSVP 519 Figure 94 Sample RSVP Configuration Source station End stations Routers ...
Page 566: ...566 CHAPTER 18 DEVICE MONITORING ...
Page 572: ...572 APPENDIX A TECHNICAL SUPPORT ...
Page 592: ...592 INDEX ...