On 8/8/07, Brian Candler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 08, 2007 at 04:18:29PM +0530, pankaj jain wrote:
> > you have mentioned only eth0 in the figure, I dont know how you can
> > connect to multiple devices using single interface. if you are able to
> > connect then I am assuming that you are using a switch in between.
> > I would say you can use vlan aware switch.
>
> Yes, that's correct. eth0.1, eth0.2, eth0.3, eth0.4 are VLANs 1-4 on eth0 in
> the diagram I gave.
>
> > the port in which eth0 is connected will be configured for all
> > vlan-ids and the other ports on which the routers are connected will
> > be configured only for the corresponding vlan-id.
> >
> > The only problem I feel can occur in the learning phase of the switch
> > is whether it will forward arp requests on the basis of vlan-id or
> > broadcast to all ports. If it broadcasts it will be a problem.
>
> If it does, then it is not a switch, but a heap of junk. Broadcasts of any
> sort (ARP or otherwise) on one VLAN should never appear on ports belonging
> to any other VLAN.
>
> Anyway, I don't have any problem with the switch part; it's the Linux
> configuation to allow the same IP address range to appear on multiple
> interfaces which is the issue.

> If you prefer, consider my original diagram with four separate ethernet
> cards called eth0, eth1, eth2 and eth3. The problem remains the same.
>
> Regards,
>
> Brian.
>

It would be very helpful if you could please explain the issues which
we can face if we plumb the same IP address range on multiple interfaces
because I normally assign the ip addresses from the same subnet to all
of my interfaces.


-- 
Thanks
Pankaj Jain
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