Core Layer: Two core switches (CORE A & CORE B) for redundancy and high availability. VLAN 1 and VLAN 10 are configured for different devices. Each layer is served by specialized switches, with the access switch connecting end-user devices, the distribution switch aggregating traffic and enforcing policies, and the core switch acting as the high-speed backbone. This guide will demystify these roles and help you understand their. At present, we're using L2 VLAN trunks between the core and access. Some concerns I have with his argument are: * We're used to using L2 VLAN trunks * The L2 design is fairly simple * The end users are not "sensitive" enough to feel a failover of links from one core switch to another when a trunk. It contains three layers: core, distribution, and access. The core layer is the backbone of the network. 1Q trunks, carrying many VLANs. Why did this design dominate? 1. Simplicity (at first) You only think in. Instead of using 802.
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