This is called 'routing on a stick'.  Send us your sanitized config.  What 
router are you using?


>From: "sujar khmar" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: "sujar khmar" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: VLAN's
>Date: Tue, 29 Aug 2000 14:56:29 -0400
>
>Group,
>     I have a catalyst 3524 switch in my practice lab set up with four 
>vlans
>(1-4).  One port is a member  of all vlans and that is the router port.  In
>what I have learned you should be able to be a node on vlan 2 and be able 
>to
>go out the vlan2 port on the switch to the router and back to the vlan 4
>port (or any other vlan for that matter)  and reach a node on vlan 4.  I
>said should be able to because it doesn't work that way right now for me.  
>I
>can see every node on the network except the nodes on vlan 1, 3-4.  I have
>deduced that it isn't being routed back into the appropriate port.  All
>these networks are on the same subnet, but since it's not a 5000 so I can't
>assign a different subnet.
>     Am I way off base here?  My question really is how can I route vlan 1
>back to vlan 2 via one ethernet port on the router back to the other vlans.
>
>
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