Accelar VLAN Manager
Contents:
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What is a VLAN?
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VLAN Manager Application
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Domains
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VLAN View
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Device View
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Operations:
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Creating a new VLAN
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Deleting an existing VLAN
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Renaming a VLAN
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Moving ports from one VLAN to another
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Creating Trunk ports
What is a VLAN?
A Virtual LAN can best be described as a bridge or broadcast domain with
fluid boundaries that are determined by management software rather than
router interfaces. Workgroups are organized to support fluid project structures.
VLAN members can share resources without having to move to the same physical
LAN segment. VLAN membership can be determined by switch port, IP subnet,
or protocol type.
VLAN Manager Application
This application is designed to help you manage VLANs on one or more Accelar
switches. A managed collection of switches is called a domain.
The application window contains a menubar, toolbar, VLAN view, and a
status bar. Buttons in the toolbar are accelerators for frequently used
operations that also appear in the menubar:
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toggle between displaying members
by VLAN or by device.
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open domain.
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tidy icons in view.
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create a new VLAN.
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delete the selected VLAN.
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print the current view.
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display online help.
Domains
One or more devices can be opened at any time by pressing the Open Domain
button. Select the domain you wish to manage or press the Open button.
Any errors will be displayed on the status line and a progress bar will
provide feedback on the operation's duration.
If you want to create or delete domains or update the device list in a
domain, press the Edit button. This will update the dialog as
so:
Two lists are displayed together with entry fields beneath them. In
the previous example, there are two domains. RapidCity is open and
the member switches - vx3 and vx4 - are displayed together with
their community strings. In edit mode, double-clicking a domain will list
its membership in the rightmost listbox. (Since community strings are displayed
openly, this information should be stored securely.)
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Add: adds either a domain or device according to which entry field
is used.
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Remove: removes selected domain or device entry.
Validation
Checks are performed for five different errors on each VLAN as it is read from the devices:
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Same ID, different Name: two devices define the same VLAN ID but use different
names.
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Same ID, different Type: two devices define the same VLAN ID but have different
types.
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Same ID, different Subtypes: two devices define the same VLAN ID but have
different protocols or subnet addresses.
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Same ID, different STG ID: two devices define the same VLAN ID but have
different STG IDs.
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Same ID, different Priority: two devices define the same VLAN ID but have
different priorities.
These errors are recorded in the Error log which can be displayed
from View->Error Log.
Vlan View
The VLAN View has three elements:
Trunk. Trunk ports are displayed horizontally on the trunk line.
Trunk ports can be a member of multiple VLANs and are used to transport
data between VLANs.
Unassigned. Routable ports and ports that are not VLAN members are
displayed vertically in the Unassigned box.
Spanning Tree Group (STG). STGs are used to physically segmented ports
on switches. An STG can have multiple VLANs within it. No VLAN may span
multiple STGs.
Each VLAN is displayed vertically with its members. The VLAN colors
are used to facilitate identification. There are two kinds of VLANs:
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Static or port-based VLANs
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Policy-based VLANs.
Port-based VLANs have static memberships; they won't change regardless
of which device is connected to the port until a management configuration
change.
Policy-based VLANs have dynamic port memberships depending on what traffic
is seen on the port. For example, All IPX traffic can belong to
the IPX VLAN. All traffic between IP subnet 38.242.32.0 belongs
to the green VLAN, and so on. You have the option of statically configuring
ports to a dynamic VLAN. This means that, for example, port 1/1 must always be
a member of the IPX VLAN. You can also manually prevent certain
ports from ever becoming a member of a particular dynamic VLAN.
You can toggle the display of policy-based VLANs by choosing View->Policy
Vlans in the menubar.
Configuring VLAN memberships.
You can drag ports between the Trunk line, Unassigned, and
VLANs-by-Port. You can not manipulate Dynamic VLAN static or forbidden
port membership within the application. (You must use Device
Manager to do this.)
Ports may be selected by dragging a bounding-box (marquee) around them
or by clicking on a single port. The selected ports can then be dragged
to their destination. They must be released within 2 pixels of their target
- this can be tricky on a crowded VLAN. If a port is released over the
trunk line, you must select from a list of VLANs to trunk to.
If you move ports across Spanning Tree Groups, you will be asked to
confirm that you do want to move those ports into that STG.
Routable ports will always appear in Unassigned. They cannot be
selected.
Editing VLAN names.
You can rename static or dynamic VLANs by clicking on their names and typing.
Press the Escape key to cancel the rename operation.
Legend.
The Help->Legend menu displays a review of what the icons mean:
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Port VLAN
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Policy VLAN
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Static Port
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Trunk Port
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Routable Port
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Policy-activated Port
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Policy-forbidden Port
Device View
Occasionally it is useful to view VLANs by device; that is, which ports
on a given device are members of a particular VLAN. Press the View
button to toggle between the two views. You can launch Device
Manager by double-clicking on the device name or by selecting File->Launch
Device Manager from the menubar.
You cannot select anything in the Device view.
Operations
Creating a new VLAN
Press the Create VLAN button and enter the VLANs name. All
other attributes have defaults (VLAN-by-port); these defaults can be easily
overriden.
Deleting an existing VLAN
Select a VLAN by clicking the left mouse button on its icon
,
and press the Delete VLAN button.
Renaming a VLAN
Move the insertion cursor into the VLAN name by clicking the left mouse
and start typing just as you would in an entry field. Press Return
to make the make the change.
Viewing a VLAN's attributes
Double-click on the VLAN's icon or select and choose Edit->VLAN Attributes...
from the menubar.
Moving (static) ports from one VLAN to another
You can select one port by clicking on its icon, or you can select multiple
ports using a marquee selection (i.e., hold the left mouse button, drag,
and release). Drag the selected port or ports to the destination VLAN and
release. The port icon must connect to the VLAN line. If you have not released
over a VLAN line or if the device rejects the VLAN change, the ports will
spring back to their original location.
Creating trunk ports
Trunk ports are used to carry VLAN packets from one device to another.
To balance the load on the device, they may trunk different subsets of
the defined VLANs.
You can create a trunked port by dragging a port from a VLAN and releasing
it over the trunk line. You will be prompted for the list of trunked VLANs
before the operation can continue.
You can see which VLANs a trunk port can carry by moving your mouse
over the port icon and pressing on the left mouse button. Yellow connecting
lines will appear between the VLANs and the trunk line.
Print View
Press the Print button to print the currently displayed view.