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switch
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Introducing workgroup switches may introduce subtle renumbering
needs. Fundamentally, workgroup switches are specialized, high-
...
... Introducing workgroup switches may introduce subtle renumbering
needs. Fundamentally, workgroup switches are specialized, high-
performance bridges ...
... links.
Introducting single switches or stacks of switches may not have
significant impact on addressing ...
...
Introducting single switches or stacks of switches may not have
significant impact on addressing, as long as it is remembered that
...
... significant impact on addressing, as long as it is remembered that
each system of switches is a single broadcast domain. Each broadcast ...
... VLAN) further extend the complexity of the role of
workgroup switches. It is generally true that moving an end station
from one switch port ...
... workgroup switches. It is generally true that moving an end station
from one switch port to another within the same "color" VLAN will not
...
... address change.
Switches are commonly managed by SNMP applications. These network
management applications communicate with managed devices using IP ...
... network
management applications communicate with managed devices using IP.
Even if the switch does not do IP forwarding, it will itself need IP
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... Layer 2 or
Layer 3 devices. A workgroup switch product often includes a router
function, so the numbering plan ...
... point-to-point media) or increasing the number of
hosts on a medium (e.g., in greater use of workgroup switches).
Both the high-order and low-order parts may change. This might
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