I think a lot of the issue is, that in the past
it did not work because the 10mb chipset in the older
routers did not support the sub-intf and vlan trunking.

The newer chipsets may well have the ability to do that and
Dave has come across something that is included in the IOS
and that is supported in the hardware.


Larry Letterman
Cisco Systems
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
MADMAN
Sent: Thursday, March 28, 2002 12:34 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: If it's a 2611, you're out of luck [7:39788]


I didn't make it work yet but I sent this:

C2612A(config)#int e0/0.1
C2612A(config-subif)#enca
C2612A(config-subif)#encapsulation ?
  dot1Q  IEEE 802.1Q Virtual LAN
  sde    IEEE 802.10 Virtual LAN - Secure Data Exchange

  Dave

Larry Letterman wrote:
>
> apparently last week some one on the list made the ethernets work
> in a 2600 router at 10mb....
>
> Larry Letterman
> Cisco Systems
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, March 28, 2002 10:15 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: If it's a 2611, you're out of luck [7:39788]
>
> Vlan trunking requires a fast ethernet connection.  It cannot be trunked
> with a 261X.  You'd need a 262X.
>
> If you have to deal with a 2611, your options become much more limited.
You
> could replace the 2611 with a 2620.  Or you could get a ethernet module
for
> the 2611.  Unfortunately, last time I checked (whish was a couple years
ago,
> given) those ethernet modules came in two models, 1 and 4 port, and cost
> about $1000 per port.
>
> Another option would be to replace the 2611 with a 1750.  It's got one
fast
> ethernet port.  If this network is as small as it sounds, it'd be a viable
> option.
>
> Oh, and about trunking, the way it works is you define the switch port
> connected to the router as a trunk.  This allows multiple (in your case,
> all) vlans to use the one port.  The router is configured with
subinterfaces
> on the fastethernet port, one for each vlan.  The router can then route
> between these vlans.
--
David Madland
Sr. Network Engineer
CCIE# 2016
Qwest Communications Int. Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
612-664-3367

"Emotion should reflect reason not guide it"




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