cyberspace
Technical User
For some reason I was under the impression that on a 5500 switch, only 1 vlan (when in hybrid mode) could be set as untagged.
However I see on the 4800 I can have several VLANs untagged.
When the switch is on it's own (that is, a single stack, no other switches to connect to), what is the benefit of tagged vs untagged?
I understand that generally tagging adds the 802.1Q header to give VLAN ID, etc, which is used over trunk links...but I am now a little confused over what it's doing on a single stack.
I work with the 3Com VCX and I always set up switches with hybrid ports with VLAN1 untagged and VLAN x (x = voice vlan id) tagged.
Would appreciate it if someone could clear up this particular scenario for me as it's just got me confused as to whether or not it actually does anythig when theres only 1 stack on a single site.
Thanks in advance
'When all else fails.......read the manual'
However I see on the 4800 I can have several VLANs untagged.
When the switch is on it's own (that is, a single stack, no other switches to connect to), what is the benefit of tagged vs untagged?
I understand that generally tagging adds the 802.1Q header to give VLAN ID, etc, which is used over trunk links...but I am now a little confused over what it's doing on a single stack.
I work with the 3Com VCX and I always set up switches with hybrid ports with VLAN1 untagged and VLAN x (x = voice vlan id) tagged.
Would appreciate it if someone could clear up this particular scenario for me as it's just got me confused as to whether or not it actually does anythig when theres only 1 stack on a single site.
Thanks in advance
'When all else fails.......read the manual'