11-04-2002 11:03 AM - edited 03-02-2019 02:37 AM
Hello net gurus!
I have a server that is used for file serving on one VLAN most of the time, but on occasion we also use it to BOOTP and setup other machines, on one of about 6 VLANs. We only have one interface in the machine and I'm wondering, without taking it off the intial VLAN how can I also place it on another one. I found that the 6506's don't sport multi-vlan ports. Thanks!
-Paul Gomez
11-04-2002 11:53 AM
Hi,
You dont need to physically move the server to each vlan. You might be having a router (external) or a RSM/MSFC on your 6500 to route between the vlans. On each vlan interface (i assume 2 through 6) which needs the Bootp requests to be passed to vlan 1, set a "ip helper-address" command, to forward all requests to this server ip address in vlan 1.
So if the server in vlan 1 has ip add 10.1.1.254,
on other vlan interfaces on the MSFC,
interface vlan 2
ip add<>
ip helper-address 10.1.1.254
interface vlan 3
ip add<>
ip helper-address 10.1.1.254
interface vlan 4
ip add<>
ip helper-address 10.1.1.254
interface vlan 5
ip add<>
ip helper-address 10.1.1.254
interface vlan 6
ip add<>
ip helper-address 10.1.1.254
hope this helps!
11-05-2002 08:02 AM
Thanks for the suggestion, only problem is we're not running RSM on our switch... just a 6506 with a sup card, 48 port module and a 8 port gigabit...
Any more suggestions.. Thanks!
-Paul
11-05-2002 08:08 AM
You willl have to have a router or at least an ISL/DOT1Q trunk to the server. The only way between two VLAN's is via a routed interface.
There are options which are not expensive such as a trunk capable card from Intel and plenty of other vendors. You could also you Etherchannel via this method this creating a nice big logical pipe to the server.
If you go this route, you would config the switch port connected to the server as a trunk link, if you have more physical ports i would suggest etherchanneling to the server, this trunk would carry all VLANs and thus eliminates the need for an external router as the server could do that.
11-05-2002 08:11 AM
Of course....if you dont have a layer 3 switch, you can route, between the vlans, using your external router. You need to configure a trunk link between the router and the switch...(router on a stick configuration), allowing all the 6 vlans. The external router will route between the vlans. You would need a fast ethernet interface on the Cisco router...as you need ISL or 802.1q encap support and subinterfaces
router configs would look like..
int fa0/0
no ip add
int fa0/0.1
description Vlan1
ip add <>
ip helper-address <>
encapsulation isl 1
int fa0/0.2
description Vlan2
ip add <>
ip helper-address <>
encapsulation isl 2
and so on.
11-06-2002 09:44 PM
As everyone has stated your problem is routing. If you are running Server 2000 or Advanced server 2000 you can configure the server to perform routing for the network. you will need to look into the hardware and system requirements for this but it is possible.
Good luck.
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