On Wed, Jan 30, 2008 at 11:56:10AM -0200, Alexandre Biancalana wrote: >On 1/30/08, Andrei Kolu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>>Alexandre Biancalana wrote: >>>>This server is an Dell Power Edge 1950, QuadCore 2.83, 2Gb Ram, one >>>>bce gigabit interface connected to a gigabit port of a Cisco 4500 in >>>>trunk mode. >> >>Why you are using trunk mode? IIRC then "trunk" is used only between Cisco >>switches and routers and your server should be in "access" mode. > >I think you don't read the entire thread.... > >I use trunk mode to "pass" more than one vlan to the same port. Do you >have any other idea on how to configure this ?
Trunking is definitely what you want. I'm using it successfully between Cisco switches and FreeBSD in a number of places. Here's IOS: | interface GigabitEthernet1/0/8 | description dev-wireless-aux | switchport trunk encapsulation dot1q | switchport trunk native vlan 8 | switchport trunk allowed vlan 88,665,679 | switchport mode trunk | spanning-tree bpduguard enable Here's rc.conf: | ifconfig_fxp1="up" | ifconfig_vlan88="inet 10.8.0.2 netmask 0xffffc000 vlan 88 | vlandev fxp1" | ifconfig_vlan88_alias0="inet 10.8.0.1 netmask 0xffffffff" | ifconfig_vlan665="inet 169.229.65.132 netmask 0xffffffc0 vlan 665 | vlandev fxp1" | ifconfig_vlan679="inet 169.229.79.132 netmask 0xffffff80 vlan 679 | vlandev fxp1" You may have already done so, but make sure your trunk is in dot1q mode. The default trunking protocol is a Cisco proprietary something, if I understand correctly. -- Chris Cowart Network Technical Lead Network & Infrastructure Services, RSSP-IT UC Berkeley
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