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Token Ring Vlans; Normal-Range Vlan Configuration Guidelines - Cisco IE 3000 Software Configuration Manual

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Chapter 13
Configuring VLANs
These sections contain normal-range VLAN configuration information:

Token Ring VLANs

Although the switch does not support Token Ring connections, a remote device such as a Catalyst 5000
series switch with Token Ring connections could be managed from one of the supported switches.
Switches running VTP Version 2 advertise information about these Token Ring VLANs:
For more information on configuring Token Ring VLANs, see the Catalyst 5000 Series Software
Configuration Guide.

Normal-Range VLAN Configuration Guidelines

Follow these guidelines when creating and modifying normal-range VLANs in your network:
OL-13018-01
Token Ring VLANs, page 13-5
Normal-Range VLAN Configuration Guidelines, page 13-5
VLAN Configuration Mode Options, page 13-6
Saving VLAN Configuration, page 13-6
Default Ethernet VLAN Configuration, page 13-7
Creating or Modifying an Ethernet VLAN, page 13-8
Deleting a VLAN, page 13-9
Assigning Static-Access Ports to a VLAN, page 13-10
Token Ring TrBRF VLANs
Token Ring TrCRF VLANs
The switch supports 255 VLANs in VTP client, server, and transparent modes.
Normal-range VLANs are identified with a number between 1 and 1001. VLAN numbers 1002
through 1005 are reserved for Token Ring and FDDI VLANs.
VLAN configuration for VLANs 1 to 1005 are always saved in the VLAN database. If the VTP mode
is transparent, VTP and VLAN configuration are also saved in the switch running configuration file.
The switch also supports VLAN IDs 1006 through 4094 in VTP transparent mode (VTP disabled).
These are extended-range VLANs and configuration options are limited. Extended-range VLANs
are not saved in the VLAN database. See the
page
13-11.
Before you can create a VLAN, the switch must be in VTP server mode or VTP transparent mode.
If the switch is a VTP server, you must define a VTP domain or VTP will not function.
The switch does not support Token Ring or FDDI media. The switch does not forward FDDI,
FDDI-Net, TrCRF, or TrBRF traffic, but it does propagate the VLAN configuration through VTP.
The switch supports 128 spanning-tree instances. If a switch has more active VLANs than supported
spanning-tree instances, spanning tree can be enabled on 128 VLANs and is disabled on the
remaining VLANs. If you have already used all available spanning-tree instances on a switch,
adding another VLAN anywhere in the VTP domain creates a VLAN on that switch that is not
running spanning-tree. If you have the default allowed list on the trunk ports of that switch (which
is to allow all VLANs), the new VLAN is carried on all trunk ports. Depending on the topology of
the network, this could create a loop in the new VLAN that would not be broken, particularly if there
Configuring Normal-Range VLANs
"Configuring Extended-Range VLANs" section on
Cisco IE 3000 Switch Software Configuration Guide
13-5

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