Chapter 9 VLAN
XGS-4728F User’s Guide
113
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 23
Advanced Application > VLAN: Port Based VLAN Setup
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Setting
Wizard
Choose All connected or Port isolation.
All connected means all ports can communicate with each other, that is,
there are no virtual LANs. All incoming and outgoing ports are selected.
This option is the most flexible but also the least secure.
Port isolation means that each port can only communicate with the CPU
management port and cannot communicate with each other. All incoming
ports are selected while only the CPU outgoing port is selected. This option
is the most limiting but also the most secure.
After you make your selection, click Apply (top right of screen) to display
the screens as mentioned above. You can still customize these settings by
adding/deleting incoming or outgoing ports, but you must also click Apply
at the bottom of the screen.
Incoming
These are the ingress ports; an ingress port is an incoming port, that is, a
port through which a data packet enters. If you wish to allow two
subscriber ports to talk to each other, you must define the ingress port for
both ports. The numbers in the top row denote the incoming port for the
corresponding port listed on the left (its outgoing port). CPU refers to the
Switch management port. By default it forms a VLAN with all Ethernet
ports. If it does not form a VLAN with a particular port then the Switch
cannot be managed from that port.
Outgoing
These are the egress ports. An egress port is an outgoing port, that is, a
port through which a data packet leaves. If you wish to allow two
subscriber ports to talk to each other, you must define the egress port for
both ports. CPU refers to the Switch management port. By default it forms
a VLAN with all Ethernet ports. If it does not form a VLAN with a particular
port then the Switch cannot be managed from that port.
Apply
Click Apply to save your changes to the Switch’s run-time memory. The
Switch loses these changes if it is turned off or loses power, so use the
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-
volatile memory when you are done configuring.
Cancel
Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh.
Summary of Contents for XGS-4728F
Page 2: ......
Page 8: ...Safety Warnings XGS 4728F User s Guide 8 ...
Page 24: ...24 ...
Page 30: ...Chapter 1 Getting to Know Your Switch XGS 4728F User s Guide 30 ...
Page 34: ...Chapter 2 Hardware Installation and Connection XGS 4728F User s Guide 34 ...
Page 42: ...Chapter 3 Hardware Overview XGS 4728F User s Guide 42 ...
Page 44: ...44 ...
Page 78: ...Chapter 7 System Status and Port Statistics XGS 4728F User s Guide 78 ...
Page 92: ...Chapter 8 Basic Setting XGS 4728F User s Guide 92 ...
Page 94: ...94 ...
Page 114: ...Chapter 9 VLAN XGS 4728F User s Guide 114 ...
Page 118: ...Chapter 10 Static MAC Forward Setup XGS 4728F User s Guide 118 ...
Page 148: ...Chapter 14 Bandwidth Control XGS 4728F User s Guide 148 ...
Page 162: ...Chapter 17 Link Aggregation XGS 4728F User s Guide 162 ...
Page 186: ...Chapter 21 Policy Rule XGS 4728F User s Guide 186 ...
Page 230: ...Chapter 25 AAA XGS 4728F User s Guide 230 ...
Page 268: ...268 ...
Page 324: ...324 ...
Page 332: ...Chapter 38 Maintenance XGS 4728F User s Guide 332 ...
Page 358: ...Chapter 41 Syslog XGS 4728F User s Guide 358 ...
Page 366: ...Chapter 42 Cluster Management XGS 4728F User s Guide 366 ...
Page 370: ...Chapter 43 MAC Table XGS 4728F User s Guide 370 ...
Page 374: ...Chapter 44 IP Table XGS 4728F User s Guide 374 ...
Page 378: ...Chapter 46 Routing Table XGS 4728F User s Guide 378 ...
Page 382: ...382 ...
Page 392: ...Chapter 48 Troubleshooting XGS 4728F User s Guide 392 ...
Page 402: ...Chapter 49 Product Specifications XGS 4728F User s Guide 402 ...
Page 404: ...404 ...
Page 408: ...Appendix A Legal Information XGS 4728F User s Guide 408 ...