VLAN Introduction
“A virtual LAN (VLAN) is a group of networking devices in the same broadcast domain”
It is the concept of VLAN that most of the books are using but it doesn’t help us understand the benefits of VLANs. If you ask “What is a LAN?” you will receive the same answer: it is also a group of networking devices in the same broadcast domain!
To make it clearer, I expanded the above statement into a bit longer statement
“A virtual LAN (VLAN) is a group of networking devices in the same broadcast domain, logically”
It means that the devices in the same VLAN may be widely separated in the network, both by geography and location. VLANs logically segment the network into different broadcast domains so that packets are only switched between ports that are designated for the same VLAN.
Let’s take an example to understand the benefits of VLAN. Suppose you are working in a big company with many departments, some of them are SALES and TECHNICAL departments. You are tasked to separate these departments so that each of them can only access specific resources in the company.
This task is really easy, you think. To complete this task, you just need to use different networks for these departments and use access-list to allow/deny that network to a specific resource. For example, you assign network 192.168.1.0/24 for SALES and 192.168.2.0/24 for TECH. At the “Company router” you apply an access-list to filter traffic from these networks. Below is the topology of your network without VLANs:
Everything looks good and you implement this design to your company. But after one month you receive many complaints from both your colleagues and leaders.
+ First, your department leaders need to access to additional private resources which employees are not allowed.
+ Second, the company has just recruited some new SALES employees but now the SALES room is full so they have to sit at the 1st floor (in the TECH area). They want to access to SALES resources but they can only access to the TECH resources because they are connecting to TECH switch.
To solve the first problem maybe you will create a new and more powerful network for your leaders. But notice that each leader sits at different floor so you will need to link all of them to a switch -> what a mess!
The second problem is more difficult than the first one. Maybe you have to create another network at the TECH area and apply the same policy as the SALES department for these hosts -> another mess in management!
Maybe you will be glad to know VLAN can solve all these problems. VLAN helps you group users together according to their function rather than their physical location. This means you can use the same network for hosts in different floors (of course they can communicate with each other).
In this design:
+ you can logically create a new network with additional permissions for your leaders (LEADER network) by adding another VLAN.
+ employees can sit anywhere to access the resources in their departments, provided that you allow them to do so.
+ computers in the same department can communicate with each other although they are at different floors.
If these departments expand in the future you can still use the same network in any other floor. For example, SALES needs to have 40 more employees -> you can use 4th floor for this expansion without changing the current network.
But wait… maybe you recognize something strange in the above design? How can 2 computers connecting to 2 different switches communicate? If one computer sends a broadcast packet will it be flooded to other departments as switch doesn’t break up broadcast domains?
The answer is “Yes, they can!” and it is the beauty of VLAN. Hosts in the same VLAN can communicate normally even they are connecting to 2 or more different switches. This makes the management much more simple.
Although layer 2 switches can only break up collision domains but VLANs can be used to break up broadcast domains. So if a computer in SALES broadcasts, only computers in SALES will receive that frame.
So we don’t need a router, right? The answer is “we still need a router” to enable different VLANs to communicate with each other. Without a router, the computers within each VLAN can communicate with each other but not with any other computers in another VLAN. For example, we need a router to transfer file from LEADER to TECH. This is called “interVLAN routing”.
When using VLANs in networks that have multiple interconnected switches, you need to use VLAN trunking between the switches. With VLAN trunking, the switches tag each frame sent between switches so that the receiving switch knows which VLAN the frame belongs to. This tag is known as a VLAN ID. A VLAN ID is a number which is used to identify a VLAN.
Notice that the tag is only added and removed by the switches when frames are sent out on the trunk links. Hosts don’t know about this tag because it is added on the first switch and removed on the last switch. The picture below describes the process of a frame sent from PC A to PC B.
Note: Trunk link does not belong to a specific VLAN, rather it is a conduit for VLANs between switches and routers.
To allow interVLAN routing you need to configure trunking on the link between router and switch.
Therefore in our example we need to configure 3 links as “trunk”.
Cisco switches support two different trunking protocols, Inter-Switch Link (ISL) and IEEE 802.1q. Cisco created ISL before the IEEE standardized trunking protocol. Because ISL is Cisco proprietary, it can be used only between two Cisco switches -> 802.1q is usually used in practical.
In 802.1q encapsulation, there is a concept called native VLAN that was created for backward compatibility with old devices that don’t support VLANs. Native VLAN works as follows:
+ Frame belonging to the native VLAN is not tagged when sent out on the trunk links
+ Frame received untagged on the trunk link is set to the native VLAN.
So if an old switch doesn’t support VLAN it can still “understand” that frame and continue sending it (without dropping it).
Every port belongs to at least one VLAN. If a switch receives untagged frames on a trunkport, they are assumed to be part of the native vlan. By default, VLAN 1 is the default and native VLAN but this can be changed on a per port basis by configuration.
Now to the configuration part , in this part I use the “building” topology with two switches at the 1st & 3rd floors and one Main Sw.
VLAN Configuration
Creating VLAN
1st_Floor_Switch#configure terminal
1st_Floor_Switch(config)#vlan 2
1st_Floor_Switch(config-vlan)#name SALES
1st_Floor_Switch(config-vlan)#vlan 3
1st_Floor_Switch(config-vlan)#name TECH
1st_Floor_Switch(config-vlan)#vlan 10
1st_Floor_Switch(config-vlan)#name LEADER
Notice that we don’t need to exit out of “Vlan mode” to create another VLAN.
We also use the above configuration for 3rd_Floor_Switch & Main Sw.
Set VLAN Membership
Assign VLAN to each port:
1st_Floor_Switch(config)#interface f0/0
1st_Floor_Switch(config-if)#switchport access vlan 2
1st_Floor_Switch(config-if)#interface f0/1
1st_Floor_Switch(config-if)#switchport access vlan 3
Notice that for port connecting to host we must configure it as access port.
Create Trunk Ports:
+ On 2950 & 2960 Switches: Switches 2950 & 2960 only have 802.1q encapsulation so to turn it on we simply use this command:
Main_Sw(config-if)#switchport mode trunk
+ On 3550 & 3560 Switches: There are two encapsulation types in 3550 & 3560 Cisco switch: 802.1q and ISL but there are 3 encapsulation methods: 802.1q, ISL and negotiate.The default encapsulation is negotiate. This method signals between the trunk ports to choose an encapsulation method. ISL is preferred over 802.1q so we have to configure to “dot1q” if we want to use this standard.
Main_Sw(config-if)#switchport trunk encapsulation dot1q
Main_Sw(config-if)#switchport mode trunk
In fact, if you use VLAN Trunking Protocol (VTP) then you only need to configure VLAN on the Main Sw, set the Main Sw to “Server” mode and 2 other switches to “Client” mode. To learn more about VTP, please read my VTP tutorial.
VLAN Summaries:
+ VLANs are used to create logical broadcast domains and Layer 3 segments in a given network
+ A VLAN is considered a logical segment because the traffic it carries may traverse multiple physical network segments
Cisco switches support two different trunking protocols, Inter-Switch Link (ISL) and IEEE 802.1q. In 802.1q, native VLAN frames are untagged.
The benefits of VLANs
1. Segment networks into multiple smaller broadcast domains without Layer 3 network devices such as routers. VLANs make switched Ethernet networks more bandwidth-efficient through this segmentation of broadcast domains.
2. Group users together according to function rather than physical location. In a traditional network, users in a given work area are on the same network segment regardless of their job description or department. Using VLANs, however, you could have one salesperson in each work area of the building sitting next to engineers in their work area, yet on a separate logical network segment.
3. The ability to reconfigure ports logically without the need to unplug wires and move them around. If a user takes his or her computer to a new work area, no cables need to be swapped on the switch, just access the switch and issue commands to change the VLAN assignments for the old and new ports. VLANs thus simplify the process of adding, moving, and deleting users on the network. They also improve network security by avoiding cabling mishaps that can arise when users are moved in traditional Ethernet networks.
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