cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
cancel
759
Views
15
Helpful
4
Replies

how can i have multiple subnet from same vlan

Mk25
Level 1
Level 1

hi,

how can i have these subnets in same VLAN.

Network Address              Usable Host Range                          Broadcast Address:
172.17.221.0                 172.17.221.1 - 172.17.221.2               172.17.221.3
172.17.221.4                172.17.221.5 - 172.17.221.6              172.17.221.7
172.17.221.8                172.17.221.9 - 172.17.221.10              172.17.221.11
172.17.221.12               172.17.221.13 - 172.17.221.14           172.17.221.15

 

1 Accepted Solution

Accepted Solutions

balaji.bandi
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame

what is the reason to be in the same VLAN, if all same VLAN, why not have a single subnet?

 

BB

***** Rate All Helpful Responses *****

How to Ask The Cisco Community for Help

View solution in original post

4 Replies 4

balaji.bandi
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame

what is the reason to be in the same VLAN, if all same VLAN, why not have a single subnet?

 

BB

***** Rate All Helpful Responses *****

How to Ask The Cisco Community for Help

GVD
Level 1
Level 1

configure subnet 172.17.221.0/28 on the SVI

"configure subnet 172.17.221.0/28 on the SVI"

Nooooo.

If you do that, subnet broadcast addresses .3, .7 and .11 become host addresses as well as network addresses .4, .8 and .12 become host addresses too.

Further all hosts would consider the other subnets' IPs to be in its own subnet rather than external networks.

Don't confuse the summary address covering those subnets the same as a subnet address on an SVI rather than the distinct subnets.

Joseph W. Doherty
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame

Yes.

On the SVI configure one of those subnets as the primary and the others as secondaries.

Doing this, though, does raise some issues, such as a full broadcast (not a network broadcast) will be seen by all hosts or if host don't have a gateway configured, they won't initially send traffic to it.  Also, some routing protocols and support services work (or not work) with secondaries.

Review Cisco Networking for a $25 gift card