Service Manual

Table Of Contents
member Port-channel 10,20
shutdown
Dell#
Verify that the Port Channels used in the VLT Domain are Assigned to the VLAN-Stack VLAN
Dell#show vlan id 50
Codes: * - Default VLAN, G - GVRP VLANs, R - Remote Port Mirroring VLANs, P -
Primary, C - Community, I - Isolated
O - Openflow
Q: U - Untagged, T - Tagged
x - Dot1x untagged, X - Dot1x tagged
o - OpenFlow untagged, O - OpenFlow tagged
G - GVRP tagged, M - Vlan-stack
i - Internal untagged, I - Internal tagged, v - VLT untagged, V - VLT tagged
NUM Status Description Q Ports
50 Active M Po10(Te 1/8)
M Po20(Te 1/20)
V Po1(Te 1/30-32)
Dell#
IPv6 Peer Routing in VLT Domains Overview
Peer routing for IPv6 packets in VLT domains is supported on the S4810, S4820T, S6000, Z9000, and
MXL platforms.
Virtual Link Trunking (VLT) is a mechanism that enables the physical links between two devices that are
called VLT nodes or peers, and within a VLT domain, to be considered as a single logical link to external
devices that are connected using LAG bundles to both the VLT peers. This capability enables redundancy
without the implementation of Spanning Tree Protocol (STP), thereby providing a loop-free network with
optimal bandwidth utilization.
Peer routing for IPv6 packets in a VLT domain is supported. This mechanism of IPv6 peer routing is
supported on all the platforms that are compatible with IPv6 routing and support VLT. This functionality
performs the following operations:
Forwarding the control traffic to correct VLT node when the control traffic reaches wrong VLT node
due to hashing at the VLT LAG level on the ToR.
Routing the data traffic which is destined to peer VLT node.
Synchronizing the neighbor entries learned on VLT VLAN interfaces between VLT primary and
secondary node.
Synchronizing the IP address of VLT VLAN interfaces between the VLT primary node and secondary
node.
Performing routing on behalf of peer VLT nodes for a configured time period when a peer VLT node
goes down.
When you configure Layer 3 VLT peer routing by using the peer-routing command in VLT DOMAIN
mode, it applies for both IPv4 and IPv6 traffic in VLT domains. Layer 3 VLT provides a higher resiliency at
the Layer 3 forwarding level. Routed VLT enables you to replace VRRP with routed VLT to route the traffic
from Layer 2 access nodes. With neighbor discovery (ND) synchronization, both the VLT nodes will
perform Layer 3 forwarding on behalf of each other.
The neighbor entries are typically learned by a node using neighbor solicitation (NS) and ND messages.
These NS or neighbor advertisement (NA) messages can be either destined to the VLT node or to any
Virtual Link Trunking (VLT)
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