Manual
Chapter 4: Trunking
32
Trunking Overview
A port trunk is an economical way for you to increase the bandwidth
between the Ethernet switch and another networking device, such as a
network server, router, workstation, or another Ethernet switch. A port
trunk is a group of ports that have been grouped together to function as
one logical path. A port trunk, therefore, increases the bandwidth between
the switch and the other network device and is useful in situations where a
single physical link between the devices is insufficient to handle the traffic
load. The AT-S82 management software provides for four trunks with a
maximum of two ports each.
Because network vendors employ different techniques to implement
trunking, a trunk on one device might not be compatible with the same
feature on a device from another manufacturer. Therefore, trunks are
typically made only between devices from the same vendor.
If a port in a static trunk loses its link, the trunk’s total bandwidth is
reduced until the lost link is reconfigured.
Trunking
Guidelines
The following are guidelines for setting up trunking:
To ensure compatibility, set up trunks only between AT-GS950/8
devices.
The trunk always contains two ports, one of which is designated the
master port.
The AT-S82 management software is preconfigured for you to select
trunks 1, 2, 3, or 4, with ports preassigned to each trunk. Trunk 1 has
ports 1 and 2, trunk 2 has ports 3 and 4, and so forth. You cannot alter
either setting.
Before you create a trunk, examine the speed, duplex mode, and flow
control settings of all the ports that will be in the trunk. Verify that the
port settings are identical.
After you create a trunk, do not change the speed, duplex mode, or
flow control setting of any port in the trunk without making the same
changes to the other ports.
The ports of the trunk must be members of the same VLAN.
The switch selects the lowest numbered port in the trunk to handle
broadcast packets and packets of unknown destination. For example,
in trunk 2 containing ports 3 and 4, port 3 is used for broadcast
packets.
Trunking
Algorithm
One of the steps in creating a trunk is the selection of a load distribution
method, also known as the trunking (or load distribution) algorithm. This
algorithm determines how the switch distributes the traffic load across the
ports of the trunk. The AT-S82 management software provides three load