I have specified them with different colours and also earlier I said which LANs are similar. In the future as God wills I will improve the videos. Thank you.
Decent explanation, would be very good if scripted and some audio editing done. Looking forward to seeing future videos and the improvement that comes with it.
Yes or it can be an uplink to a router. In either case the uplink carries traffic for multiple VLANs. The router can be configured to route the traffic between VLANs and apply firewall rules to permit/deny certain traffic between VLANs.
@@luckbeforeleap Maybe you can answer my doubt: is it mandatory to have both a router and a switch that can handle vlans? If I have a "dumb" router, that doesn't support vlans, can I buy a switch that supports vlans and then connect all my equipment to the switch and the switch to the router? Is that possible? Thanks!
@@RaduRadonys You could - but if you want to support multiple networks your router will need to have multiple physical ports. In that case you could connect a switch port to a router port and make sure that they are both handling traffic for the same network. However, having a VLAN-aware router would allow you to carry traffic for multiple isolated networks across a single physical link between the router and the switch.
@@luckbeforeleap Thank you! So in this case if my router has 4 LAN ports and my switch which supports vlans has 8 LAN ports, I can have a total of 4 VLANS? Did I understand correctly?
Great explanation
Excellent!
Glad you liked it!
Good explanation!
Thanks for sharing!
Thank you very much for your decent explanation نشكؤك جدا على الشرح السهل
Thank you very much, hope you liked it!
Please do drawings with a trunk port so that it is obvious how LAN switches are interconnected.
I have specified them with different colours and also earlier I said which LANs are similar. In the future as God wills I will improve the videos. Thank you.
VLAN tags are placed immediately after the source mac address before the type field.
Please update your example.
Thank you very much @@raypino6695 . videos will improve in the future.
Decent explanation, would be very good if scripted and some audio editing done. Looking forward to seeing future videos and the improvement that comes with it.
Thank you very much for your words. God willing, the videos will improve soon
So a trunk port is basically the uplink port to another switch?
Yes or it can be an uplink to a router. In either case the uplink carries traffic for multiple VLANs. The router can be configured to route the traffic between VLANs and apply firewall rules to permit/deny certain traffic between VLANs.
@@luckbeforeleap Thank you for clarifying
@@luckbeforeleap Maybe you can answer my doubt: is it mandatory to have both a router and a switch that can handle vlans? If I have a "dumb" router, that doesn't support vlans, can I buy a switch that supports vlans and then connect all my equipment to the switch and the switch to the router? Is that possible? Thanks!
@@RaduRadonys You could - but if you want to support multiple networks your router will need to have multiple physical ports. In that case you could connect a switch port to a router port and make sure that they are both handling traffic for the same network. However, having a VLAN-aware router would allow you to carry traffic for multiple isolated networks across a single physical link between the router and the switch.
@@luckbeforeleap Thank you! So in this case if my router has 4 LAN ports and my switch which supports vlans has 8 LAN ports, I can have a total of 4 VLANS? Did I understand correctly?
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Hard to understand your logic.
There is always another way to understand something. You may find other youtubers who may explain it easier. Try them out.