- Community Home
- >
- Networking
- >
- Switching and Routing
- >
- Comware Based
- >
- Re: Switch routing
Categories
Company
Local Language
Forums
Discussions
Forums
- Data Protection and Retention
- Entry Storage Systems
- Legacy
- Midrange and Enterprise Storage
- Storage Networking
- HPE Nimble Storage
Discussions
Discussions
Discussions
Forums
Discussions
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
- BladeSystem Infrastructure and Application Solutions
- Appliance Servers
- Alpha Servers
- BackOffice Products
- Internet Products
- HPE 9000 and HPE e3000 Servers
- Networking
- Netservers
- Secure OS Software for Linux
- Server Management (Insight Manager 7)
- Windows Server 2003
- Operating System - Tru64 Unix
- ProLiant Deployment and Provisioning
- Linux-Based Community / Regional
- Microsoft System Center Integration
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Discussion Boards
Community
Resources
Forums
Blogs
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Mark Topic as New
- Mark Topic as Read
- Float this Topic for Current User
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Printer Friendly Page
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
03-12-2012 09:40 AM
03-12-2012 09:40 AM
Switch routing
Hello,
I have a question about routing at the switch. I would like my the clients to be routed at teh switch and only directed to the router in order to resolve external hosts/services.
I have 5 VLANs (10, 20, 30, 10, and 100) and each have a different subnet (192.168.10, 192.168.20, 192.168.30, 192.168.50, 192.168.100).
So in order to be able to route traffic from 192.168.10 to 192.168.50 will i need to configure VLAN 10 with 2 ip interfaces, 192.168.10.xx and 192.168.50.xx and enable routing?
thanks.
- Tags:
- VLAN
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
03-16-2012 07:43 PM
03-16-2012 07:43 PM
Re: Switch routing
I assume the 4th VLAN was a typo, and you actually have 10, 20, 30, 50, and 100, corresponding to their respective subnet numbers.
To enable routing between these, you need to enable routing on your switch, add an IP address to each VLAN interface, and make that IP the default gateway of your clients. If you want your clients to talk to outside systems, you will also need to set a default route on the switch.
Note that it's only 1 IP per VLAN interface, not two IPs on the same VLAN interface as you mentioned in your original post.
Good luck!
Paul