3.2.8-Packet-Tracer - Investigate-A-Vlan-Implementation
3.2.8-Packet-Tracer - Investigate-A-Vlan-Implementation
3.2.8-Packet-Tracer - Investigate-A-Vlan-Implementation
Addressing Table
Device Interface IP Address Subnet Mask Default Gateway
Objectives
Part 1: Observe Broadcast Traffic in a VLAN Implementation
Part 2: Observe Broadcast Traffic without VLANs
Background
In this activity, you will observe how broadcast traffic is forwarded by the switches when VLANs are configured and
when VLANs are not configured.
Instructions
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Packet Tracer - Investigate a VLAN Implementation
Look at the Simulation Panel, where did S3 send the packet after receiving it?
In normal operation, when a switch receives a broadcast frame on one of its ports, it forwards the frame out all
other ports. Notice that S2 only sends the ARP request out F0/1 to S1. Also notice that S3 only sends the ARP
request out F0/11 to PC4. PC1 and PC4 both belong to VLAN 10. PC6 belongs to VLAN
30. Because broadcast traffic is contained within the VLAN, PC6 never receives the ARP request from PC1.
Because PC4 is not the destination, it discards the ARP request. The ping from PC1 fails because PC1 never
receives an ARP reply.
When the packet reached S1, why does it also forward the packet to PC7?
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Packet Tracer - Investigate a VLAN Implementation
c. From Simulation mode, click the Capture/Forward button to step through the process. Notice that the
switches now forward the ARP requests out all ports, except the port on which the ARP request was received.
This default action of switches is why VLANs can improve network performance. Broadcast traffic is contained
within each VLAN. When the Buffer Full window appears, click the View Previous Events button.
Reflection Questions
1. If a PC in VLAN 10 sends a broadcast message, which devices receive it?
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