Advanced search
Home     Login    Registration    Subscribe to articles    Feed Generator     FAQ    Contact Us   
Sign In
E-mail Address
Password
Remember Me
No account yet?   Register now
Categories
Certification Tests
An Introduction To MCSE Certif ...
CCNA MCSE CCNP Certificati ...
CCNA Certification Exam Tutori ...
CCNP BSCI Exam Tutorial: Ro ...
CCNP Certification BCMSN Exa ...
CCNP Certification BCMSN Exa ...
CCNP Certification BCMSN Exa ...
CCNP Certification BSCI Exam ...
CCNP Certification BSCI Exam ...
CCNP Certification BSCI Exam ...
Cisco Microsoft Computer Cer ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificati ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP BCMSN Exam ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Certificatio ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Exam Tutoria ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Exam Tutoria ...
Cisco CCNA CCNP Home Lab Tut ...
Cisco CCNA Certification Exam ...
Cisco CCNA Certification Exam ...

Cisco CCNA Certification Exam Tutorial: Conf

by Chris Bryant

Not only is your CCNA exam going to have questions on VLAN trunking protocol, almost any network that has more than one VLAN is going to have VTP running. Whether you're planning on passing the CCNA exam or just brushing up on your networking skills, this VTP tutorial will help you learn the basics of this important protocol.

VTP allows switches to advertise VLAN information between other members of the same VTP domain. VTP allows a consistent view of the switched network across all switches. When a VLAN is created on one switch in a VTP server, all other VTP devices in the domain are notified of that VLAN's existence. VTP servers will know about every VLAN, even VLANs that have no members on that switch.

Switches run VTP in one of three modes. In server mode, VLANs can be created, modified, and deleted on a VTP server. When these actions are taken, the changes are advertised to all switches in the VTP domain. VTP Servers keep VLAN configuration information upon reboot.

In client mode, the switch cannot modify, create, or delete VLANs. VTP clients cannot retain VLAN configuration information upon reboot; they have to obtain this information from a VTP server.

In real-world networks, this is generally done to centralize the creation and deletion of VLANs. An interesting side effect of the server/client methodology is that if a VLAN is only to have ports on the VTP client switch, the VLAN must still first be created on the VTP server. The VTP client will learn about the VLAN from the VTP server, and ports can then be placed into that VLAN.

The third VTP mode is transparent mode. VTP switches in this mode ignore VTP messages. They do forward the VTP advertisements received from other switches. VLANs can be created, deleted, and modified on a transparent server, but those changes are not advertised to the other switches in the VTP domain.

For switches running VTP to successfully exchange VLAN information, three things have to happen. I've listed them for you in the order that you'll see them in the real world.

The VTP domain name must match. This is case-sensitive. "CISCO" and "cisco" are two different domains.

To distribute information about a newly-created VLAN, the switch upon which that VLAN is created must be in Server mode.

Learning VTP isn't just a good idea for passing your CCNA exams, it's a skill you must have to be effective in configuring and troubleshooting VLANs. I wish you the best in both of these pursuits!

Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933, is the owner of The Bryant Advantage, home of free CCNA and CCNP tutorials, The Ultimate CCNA Study Package, and Ultimate CCNP Study Packages.

You can also join his RSS feed and visit his blog, which is updated several times daily with new Cisco certification articles, free tutorials, and daily CCNA / CCNP exam questions! Details are on the website.

For a FREE copy of his latest e-books, "How To Pass The CCNA" and "How To Pass The CCNP", visit the website and download your free copies. You can also get FREE CCNA and CCNP exam questions every day! Get your CCNA study guide from The Bryant Advantage!




del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Ask BlinkList blogmarks Google Ma.gnolia RawSugar Rojo Shadows Simpy Socializer Spurl StumbleUpon Tailrank Technorati Wists Yahoo!

See other articles posted by InfoSweet
Home    About Us    Terms of Service    Privacy    FAQ    Authors Agreement   Contact Us  
© Immersion Enterprises, Inc. 2007