1-2z When a member port of an aggregation group joins/leaves an isolation group, the other ports in thesame aggregation group on the local unit will join/leave the isolation group at the same time.z For ports that belong to an aggregation group and an isolation group simultaneously, removing aport from the aggregation group has no effect on the other ports. That is, the rest ports remain inthe aggregation group and the isolation group.z Ports that belong to an aggregation group and an isolation group simultaneously are still isolatedeven when you remove the aggregation group in system view.z Adding a port of an isolation group to an aggregation group causes all the ports in the aggregationgroup being added to the isolation group.z S5600 series Ethernet switches support cross-device port isolation if IRF fabric is enabled.z For S5600 series Ethernet switches belonging to the same IRF Fabric, the port isolationconfiguration performed on a port of a cross-device aggregation group cannot be synchronized tothe other ports of the aggregation group if the ports reside on other units. That is, to add multipleports in a cross-device aggregation group to the same isolation group, you need to perform theconfiguration for each of the ports individually.Displaying and Maintaining Port Isolation ConfigurationTo do ... Use the command ... RemarksDisplay information about theEthernet ports added to theisolation groupdisplay isolate port Available in any viewPort Isolation Configuration ExampleNetwork requirementsz PC 2, PC 3 and PC 4 are connected to GigabitEthernet1/0/2, GigabitEthernet1/0/3, andGigabitEthernet1/0/4 ports.z The switch connects to the Internet through GigabitEthernet1/0/1 port.z It is desired that PC 2, PC 3 and PC 4 cannot communicate with each other.