12-02-2010 04:17 AM - edited 03-06-2019 02:19 PM
Hi All,
Can someone please clarify the "show vlan internal usage" command on a catalyst 6500.
I have read some docs on the web but i'm still a little unclear as to what vlans are clasified as internal usage?
Can someone give me a explanation around this?
Many Thanks
Kris
Solved! Go to Solution.
12-02-2010 04:54 AM
Hi,
Internal usage VLANs are created for a specific purpose in a switch. Creating a routed port (no switchport) results in the switch silently creating a specific internal VLAN and assigning the routed port into that VLAN. I am not certain if there are also another situations where a switch creates an internal VLAN but the routed port is the most common reason.
From the 3750 Configuration Guide at
Each routed port on the switch creates an internal VLAN for its use. These internal VLANs use extended-range VLAN numbers, and the internal VLAN ID cannot be used for an extended-range VLAN. If you try to create an extended-range VLAN with a VLAN ID that is already allocated as an internal VLAN, an error message is generated, and the command is rejected
Because internal VLAN IDs are in the lower part of the extended range, we recommend that you create extended-range VLANs beginning from the highest number (4094) and moving to the lowest (1006) to reduce the possibility of using an internal VLAN ID.
Before configuring extended-range VLANs, enter the show vlan internal usage privileged EXEC command to see which VLANs have been allocated as internal VLANs.
Best regards,
Peter
12-02-2010 04:54 AM
Hi,
Internal usage VLANs are created for a specific purpose in a switch. Creating a routed port (no switchport) results in the switch silently creating a specific internal VLAN and assigning the routed port into that VLAN. I am not certain if there are also another situations where a switch creates an internal VLAN but the routed port is the most common reason.
From the 3750 Configuration Guide at
Each routed port on the switch creates an internal VLAN for its use. These internal VLANs use extended-range VLAN numbers, and the internal VLAN ID cannot be used for an extended-range VLAN. If you try to create an extended-range VLAN with a VLAN ID that is already allocated as an internal VLAN, an error message is generated, and the command is rejected
Because internal VLAN IDs are in the lower part of the extended range, we recommend that you create extended-range VLANs beginning from the highest number (4094) and moving to the lowest (1006) to reduce the possibility of using an internal VLAN ID.
Before configuring extended-range VLANs, enter the show vlan internal usage privileged EXEC command to see which VLANs have been allocated as internal VLANs.
Best regards,
Peter
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide