Very Nice example. I got cleared my doubt which i had since 10 years. You explained that as ❤port priority❤ I would like to share you that which you said blocked port actually its alternative port and the state is in blocking State. We only have two state in spanning tree protocol. 1) Forward 2) Block. And we have 3 port type or role in spanning tree as per my understanding. Those 3 are as below. 1) Root Port 2) Designated Port 3) Alternet Port
@@mahendrakumarsahu4395 Yes correct. Spanning tree has evolved over the period. Mostly you see RSTP enabled by default on switch. Please do change it to 802.1D, and you will see the other port status also..
L2 having features igmp queriers cisco 300 l2 switch queries based on that switch send out multicast to that particular port switch controls multicasts on ports If multicast source resides within local network forget routers
224.0.0.1 is the multicast address that identifies all host on a network. ARP bridges the gap between IP and Ethernet. Please have a look at my ARP video.. You will get it.
@@sujoykhanbsp This course is only available on my website in both Hindi and English language. Here is the link, www.bridgewhy.com/courses/VXLAN-with-BGP-EVPN-1699003698542-6544bd32e4b01be1800aa8b2
Hello Vishnu, Very well explained and Kudos for that . I would like to add that the first stap is Underlay creating a P2P peering (Could be IGP or BGP(Probably eBGP ) ands then this peering will be used top advertise the loopbacks for the leaf switches. these loopback siwll be used to form the overlay BGP EVPN session and then the Traffic will flow over the VXLAN tunnels between the VTEPS
Hi thanks for your videos i ' m trying to register your class with one year plan.. and i ' m really sorry to ask but will there be a promotion that i can get help..? my institution gave me one year subscription for udemy and some of your class were on udemy too.. but not all classes do you have plan to upload your vxlan , multicast , fundamental of switching courses on udemy site? thank you for your works!
each computer has a private ip address so when the computer A wants to send some information to computer B in another network the computer A will have its own private Ip ..the current network router will store the computer A private Ip ..and send the info using the public Ip provided by the ISP into the other network then that network will respond and this response will go back to that router now that router know which computer to send data since it stored the sending computer (A) private ip? so why do we need MAC address ? I am still confused
Sir please make videos in English That we outside of Indians how we understand hindi? We love your videos but unfortunately most of videos are in hindi
Hey.. Believe me most of my videos are English. Whatever course I create is in Hindi as well as English. Please watch my series CCNA for Know Nothing learner. Same content but in English. Thanks
This is true for a single switch. In old legacy switching you can have max 4096 VLANS across your L2 Network which can have multiple switches. But VXLAN took out this limitation.