Over the years, there has been a lot of discussion on if VLAN 1 in Cisco switches is special or not. Does it have any characteristics that other VLANs don’t? I covered some of this in the Is VLAN 1
802.1Q-Tagged Frames Through Unmanaged Switch – Forwarded or Dropped?
As a follow-up to the post yesterday on native VLANs, there was a question on what would happen to 802.1Q-tagged frames traversing an unmanaged switch. Unmanaged in this case being a switch that does not support VLANs. While this might
Why Do We Have Native VLANs?
Recently, my friend Andy Lapteff asked an excellent question. Why do we have native VLANs? As in, why allow untagged frames on a trunk link? There was a time where we didn’t have VLANs. At first there was hubs, then
Native VLAN – why you should change it
The native VLAN (assuming 802.1Q) is a VLAN that is sent untagged by default. The default for Cisco switches is that all ports are in VLAN 1 and if trunking is used VLAN 1 will be sent untagged. VLAN 1