Ok, here is the background. Not sure of the answer to this one, can anyone help? TIA!
- Older Sun workstations derive their ethernet I/F address ("MAC address"
from values stored in the system PROM, rather than from values in PROM/ROM on the Ethernet cards themselves. As a result, when multiple I/Fs are present on (older) Sun system, they all have the same MAC address.
QUESTION:
We have an older (Sparc20) NIS server with 3 or 4 I/Fs in it, each of which is on a different VLAN; they all have the same Ethernet address, so:
How do the layer 2 switches cope with this, without disabling some ports? Is it because the multiple I/Fs are plugged into different switches (or ports on a switch), and the source frames that it sees (from the same MAC address, but different VLANS) are "tagged" by VLAN on the trunk, and that OSPF works only on a VLAN-by-VLAN basis, or maybe the trunks are not subject to OSPF?
- Older Sun workstations derive their ethernet I/F address ("MAC address"
QUESTION:
We have an older (Sparc20) NIS server with 3 or 4 I/Fs in it, each of which is on a different VLAN; they all have the same Ethernet address, so:
How do the layer 2 switches cope with this, without disabling some ports? Is it because the multiple I/Fs are plugged into different switches (or ports on a switch), and the source frames that it sees (from the same MAC address, but different VLANS) are "tagged" by VLAN on the trunk, and that OSPF works only on a VLAN-by-VLAN basis, or maybe the trunks are not subject to OSPF?