150 Network Administration: VLANFILE LOCATION: C:\Users\gina\Desktop\Checkout_new\Dell Astute\UserGuide\Dell_Astute_Network_Admin_VLAN.fmD E L L C O N F I D E N T I A L – P R E L I M I N A R Y 8 / 9 / 1 6 - F O R P R O O F O N L YA NOTE: In Access mode, a port can only be a member in a single VLAN, so beforeadding an access port to the VLAN, the VLAN the port is currently a memberin should be manually removed (by selecting it from the VLAN list and clickingthe remove button).– Membership — Packet tagging on VLAN. The possible options are:• Tagged — The LAG is a member of a VLAN. All packetsforwarded to the LAG are tagged. The packets contain VLANinformation.• Untagged — The LAG is a member of a VLAN. Packets forwardedto the LAG are untagged.• Forbidden — The LAG is denied membership to a VLAN.– Frame Type — Select the packet type accepted on the port. Thepossible options are:• Admit All — Both tagged and untagged packets are accepted onthe port.• Admit Tagged Only — Only tagged packets are accepted on theport.• Admit Untagged Only — Only untagged packets are accepted onthe port.– Ingress Filtering — Enable/disable ingress filtering, which discardspackets that are destined to VLANs of which the specific port is not amember.– Native VLAN ID(1-4094) — Enter VLAN used for untagged traffic totrunk ports. Click None if there is no VLAN for untagged traffic.– Multicast VLAN ID(1-4094) — Enter VLAN used for Multicast TVVLAN traffic on access ports. Click None if there is no VLAN forMulticast TV VLAN traffic.– Customer VLAN ID(1-4094) — Enter VLAN used for customerports. Click None if there is no customer VLAN.Protocol GroupUntagged frames received on a VLAN-aware switch can be classified bymethods others than source port, such as data-link-layer protocolidentification. This classification method is referred to as protocol-basedVLANs.