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Conference irocz::common_brouters

Title:Digital Brouters Conference
Notice:New common-code brouter family: RouteAbout, DECswitch 900
Moderator:MARVIN::HARTLL
Created:Mon Jul 17 1995
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:929
Total number of notes:3736

757.0. "Does DRS V2.0 support IP routing and bridging on same port?" by NQOS01::16.72.128.101::LOVE (Are we having fun yet?) Fri Feb 14 1997 08:23

I have a customer that has the need for a single Ethernet-to-Ethernet IP 
router.  Their current configuration is an extended LAN using 2 DECswitch 
900EFs in two separate DEChub 900.  They are joined by a DAS ring using the 
FDDI ports of the switches.  Port 6 of one of the switches needs to be 
connected to a separately administrated "foreign" IP network, and communicate 
via TCP/IP with a HOST on one of the ports of the second switch.  Can this 
first switch, after installing DRS V2.0, be configured to route IP traffic 
between port 6 and port 1 (the FDDI port)?  Can LAT, DECnet, NETBUEI, and IP 
still be bridged on all ports except port 6?  If so I would assume that I 
would need three subnets: the foreign one on port 6, a local one on the FDDI 
port, and the current subnet?

Norm
	
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757.1EDWIN::TACFri Feb 14 1997 11:4524
    V2 on the DECswitch supports 'Routing over bridge ports'.  I think you
    can do what you want, thought the answer to your specific question is
    no, I'm afraid...
    
>                                                                  Can this 
>first switch, after installing DRS V2.0, be configured to route IP traffic 
>between port 6 and port 1 (the FDDI port)?  Can LAT, DECnet, NETBUEI, and IP 
>still be bridged on all ports except port 6?                              
    
    You can't bridge IP on ports 1-5, and have it route between 1 and 6
    only.  The group of ports 1-5 can be a bridged network, which you can
    then treat as a single IP interface for the purposes of routing.  So
    what you can do is route IP traffic between port 6 and the port 1-5
    'VLAN'.  LAT, DECnet, NETBUEI, and IP will be bridged between all the
    ports in the 1-5 group.
    
    On the other switch, sounds like what you want to do is group all the
    ports together with bridging, just like normal.  The hosts on port 6
    will reach the hosts on the second switch via bridging over the FDDI.
    Presumably you wouldn't even need to upgrade this switch to DRS at all.
    
    WGE experts, feel free to jump in and correct me...
    
    Tim
757.2Okay, it will workNQOS01::16.72.128.101::LOVEAre we having fun yet?Sun Mar 02 1997 13:1110
	Okay, it looks like it can be done.  Only difference between my 
configuration and reply 1's is that the IP traffic can go out on the other 
ports (2,3,4,5).  That should be no problem since the only way that the IP 
traffic would get there is if that IP address is specifically called on.  
Since the only device that will be addressed is over on the other switch, then 
other than the broadcast messages, that will be the only traffic.  Does this 
router have the permit and deny functions that the Cisco code has on the 
brouter 90?

Norm
757.3MARVIN::CLEVELANDMon Mar 03 1997 06:277
    I'm not sure what the 'permit and deny' stuff does.  We do have
    filtering at both the bridging and IP layers.  Do you want to block IP
    traffic on ports 2-5?  I believe you can do that with a bridge level
    protocol filter (to bridging, the ports in the port group are seperate
    and distinct).
    
    Tim