cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
cancel
729
Views
5
Helpful
7
Replies

Define Trunk

lynneshri
Level 1
Level 1

Dear All,

We recently bought 5 Cisco C9200 switches, and we configured them as a stack. My question is, is there a different command for trunking when the switch is configured in stack mode? I want to configure the uplink port (Active Switch) as a trunk on the active switch and then I can configure different ports from switch 1,2,3,4 and 5 for different VLANs and then I can connect my devices to these ports.

Please let me know if I am on the right path.

Thanks in advance.

Lynnshri.

 

 

2 Accepted Solutions

Accepted Solutions

Hi @lynneshri 

 No, the trunk configuration is exactly the same for stack and non stack switch

 Just get in the interface mode and use the commamd switchport  mode trunk

View solution in original post

M02@rt37
VIP
VIP

Hello @lynneshri,

Right! The configuration for trunking remains the same as when configuring a standalone switch. You can configure the uplink port on the active switch as a trunk and then assign different ports on each switch in the stack to different VLANs.

 

Best regards
.ı|ı.ı|ı. If This Helps, Please Rate .ı|ı.ı|ı.

View solution in original post

7 Replies 7

Hi @lynneshri 

 No, the trunk configuration is exactly the same for stack and non stack switch

 Just get in the interface mode and use the commamd switchport  mode trunk

M02@rt37
VIP
VIP

Hello @lynneshri,

Right! The configuration for trunking remains the same as when configuring a standalone switch. You can configure the uplink port on the active switch as a trunk and then assign different ports on each switch in the stack to different VLANs.

 

Best regards
.ı|ı.ı|ı. If This Helps, Please Rate .ı|ı.ı|ı.

Thank you very much.

You're welcome @lynneshri 

Best regards
.ı|ı.ı|ı. If This Helps, Please Rate .ı|ı.ı|ı.

There no different at all between standalone and stack SW trunk config.

Select right port and config it as trunk.

Joseph W. Doherty
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame

In a stack, the only difference you should see is interface numbering prefixed with stack member number.

lynneshri
Level 1
Level 1

Thanks a lot for your help.

Review Cisco Networking for a $25 gift card