![]() ![]() In most implementations, this is normally VLAN 1 out of the box but it is almost always a good idea to change that setting. Both devices can also have a default/native/private VLAN assigned that is the VLAN used for untagged frames that arrive. When they arrive at the other end, the device on that end also needs to read those tags and filter the frames into their corresponding VLANs (if they exist on the other end). In the Cisco world and some others, 'trunking' is passing multiple VLANs on one physical/logical link by tagging frames as they are sent out of the port so that the Ethernet frames are identified as being part of a specific 802.1q VLAN. This is the nasty part when dealing with varying switch vendors. Keep in mind that I'm not an IT professional, so any explanations will have to be in laymans terms. I power cycle them etc and they don't get an IP address from the VLAN (10.0.2.0/24).Īt this point, I've watched several youtube video's of people setting up VLAN's on Pfsense as well as searched the pfsense forums, but I'm beginning to wonder if my cheap-ass switch simply doesn't work correctly. What is happening is that the devices on the VLAN tagged ports keep pulling IP addresses from the 10.0.1.0/24 address range. Tagged them as 10, and then in pfsense, created the VLAN also with #10 and tried using both my LAN port as a parent, and when that didn't work, the unused OPT port.īoth times, I set the IP address of the VLAN to 10.0.2.0/24 and enabled the DHCP server. I made a new VLAN on the switch with a few of the ports. All the ports in the house work just fine on the 10.0.1.0/24 network. The whole network works fine if I use it as a dumb switch. IEEE 802.3, 802.3u, 802.3ab, PCI local bus 2.2, 2.3, ANSI/IEEE 802.3, NWay auto-negotiation, Universal Bus Support 3.3 V / 5 V, IEEE 802.Here's my network in all glory that Sharpie can offer: ![]() PCI half-height card suitable for low-profile cases Gigabit Ethernet: Up to 2000 Mbps full duplex, Fast Ethernet: 100 Mbps half duplex, 200 Mbps full duplex, Ethernet: 10 Mbps half duplex, 20 Mbps full duplex Operating: 0 to 40 ☌ (32 to 104 ☏) Storage: -40 to 70 ☌ (-40 to 158 ☏)ġ20 x 120 x 18 mm (4.7 x 4.7 x 0.7 inches)ħ KB Jumbo Frames, IEEE 802.1p Priority Queues, IEEE 802.1Q VLAN Tagging, Wake on LAN, Remote Boot (PXE), Diagnostics utility Operating: 10% to 90% non-condensing Storage: 5% to 95% non-condensing ![]()
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January 2023
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