Total 12 results found for the keyword of "eos section 21 2 vlan conceptual overview"
... Configuration
Procedures
vlan Configuration
Commands
vlan Introduction
Arista switches support industry standard 802.1q vlans. Arista eos provides tools to manage and extend vlans throughout the ...
...
sFlow exports packet samples and topology meta data to a centralized collector
application.
sFlow scales and operates on all switch ports simultaneously.
eos implements sFlow on all switches, without ...
... manager can request or change. The agent gathers data from the MIB and responds to requests for information. For a list of supported MIBs, refer to the release notes for the specific eos version.
This ...
... area
and interface levels.
Note: On the same area or interface, eos allows security configuration with either AH or ESP but not
both. We can have one area or interface configured with AH and
another ...
... This allows eos to direct specific services over the specified RIB domains, overriding the default behavior. Further, this feature, through the use of user-defined tunnel RIBs, empowers an administrator ...
Routing Information Protocol (RIP)
This chapter contains the following sections.
RIP conceptual
overview
Running RIP
on the Switch
Configuring RIP on Multiple VRFs
RIP Commands
RIP conceptual ...
... OSPFv2 adjacencies with DR Other neighbors.
OSPFv2 Multiple Instances Support
eos Release 4.22.1F adds support for multiple OSPFv2 instances to
be configured in the default VRF. OSPFv2 Multiple Instances ...
VRRP and VARP
A virtual IP (VIP) address
is an IP address that does not directly connect to a specific interface.
Inbound packets sent to a Virtual IP address are redirected to a physical
network ...
Quality of Service
This chapter describes the eos Quality of Service (QoS) implementation, including configuration instructions and command descriptions. Topics covered by this chapter include ...
... SR
Policy IdentificationThe following identifies an SR
policy.
Endpoint - An IPv4 or IPv6 address which
refers to the destination of the policy. eos
allows 0/0 and 0:: and calls these IP addresses
null ...
... (also configured as a dynamic LAG) on the partner switch. The maximum number of ports per LAG varies by platform; numbers for each platform in the latest eos release are available here: https://www.arista.com/en/support/product-documentation/supported-features. ...
... in the default state which is the discarding state. This is an expected behavior.
Note: It is highly recommended that both MLAG peer switches are identical platforms and run identical eos images. ...