Cisco will recognize multiple macs on a single port but they must all be in
the same vlan.  Vlan assignment is per port.  Your other option would be to
replace the non cisco hub with a cisco switch which is trunked to the main
switch.

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-=Repy to group only... no personal=-

""NetEng""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Here's my situtation. I have a corporate PC with an IP address of
10.10.x.x
> and in the same office (and same physical network) another device with an
IP
> address of 192.168.100.x Both devices are connected to a small hub/switch
> which in turn is connected to a cisco switch. Can I have the 10.10.x.x be
> apart of one vlan and the 192.168.100.x be a member of another or the
> default vlan? Can cisco switches recognize multiple MAC addresses on a
> single switch port (if so, how many?) and be smart enough to know which
vlan
> which MAC address belongs to? This would save me hours (otherwise I have
to
> run cable for connections to our corporate network and connections to our
> test network in every cube :-( ). TIA
>
> PS I understand the best way to do this would be to connect each device
into
> the cisco switch, but I only have a single cable run to each cube/office
>
>
> (corporate pc)10.10.x.x
>      |
>     PC      PC (test network) 192.168.100.x
>      |          |
>       \        /
>        \     /
>     SWITCH/HUB (non-cisco)
>           |
>           |
> CISCO SWITCH
>     VLANs
> --------    ----------
> |          |    |              |
> | corp  |    |   test      |
> --------   -----------




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