04-03-2006 01:26 AM - edited 03-03-2019 02:37 AM
Hi there
With VRRP a router can belong to multiple groups and be a master and backup for different groups
How many VRRP groups can a router be a memeber off.
Also can a router be primary for several VRRP groups , in other words what are the limitations
cheers
per
Solved! Go to Solution.
04-03-2006 04:21 PM
Ok, Per.
Let me summarise this in a more coherent manner so that I cover all your points:
- you can have 255 VRRP groups per *physical* interface
- if you have sub-interfaces created under the interface, then these sub-interfaces will have to use VRRP group numbers out of the global pool of VRRP groups assigned to the physical interface. Therefore, the sum of all the VRRP groups configured on sub-interfaces and the physical interface cannot exceed 255.
- if you configure a VRRP group number, say group 10, on the physical interface, you cannot then use that same group number on a sub-interface of that physical interface.
- on each interface, the router can be the Master for a single VRRP group. This is true whether the interface is a physical interface or a logical, sub-interface. To answer your question, a single router could be the master for more than one VLAN.
I hope that's cleared it up a bit :-)
Pls do remember to rate posts.
Paresh
04-03-2006 01:46 AM
Hi Per,
VRRP supports up to 255 VRRP groups on a single physical interface. And I believe a router can be the primary for all the groups configured on the interface...
Paresh
04-03-2006 02:49 AM
Actually, Per, I must correct my second statement. What I really meant to write was that the router could be a master on multiple interfaces - however, on a single interface, the router can only be the primary for a single group.
The actual number of groups that a router can handle will come down to processing power, memory etc.
Paresh
04-03-2006 01:27 PM
So what's the story on a Gigabit interface with different VLANS ????
Can you only be a master for one VLAN ?????
per
04-03-2006 04:21 PM
Ok, Per.
Let me summarise this in a more coherent manner so that I cover all your points:
- you can have 255 VRRP groups per *physical* interface
- if you have sub-interfaces created under the interface, then these sub-interfaces will have to use VRRP group numbers out of the global pool of VRRP groups assigned to the physical interface. Therefore, the sum of all the VRRP groups configured on sub-interfaces and the physical interface cannot exceed 255.
- if you configure a VRRP group number, say group 10, on the physical interface, you cannot then use that same group number on a sub-interface of that physical interface.
- on each interface, the router can be the Master for a single VRRP group. This is true whether the interface is a physical interface or a logical, sub-interface. To answer your question, a single router could be the master for more than one VLAN.
I hope that's cleared it up a bit :-)
Pls do remember to rate posts.
Paresh
04-03-2006 05:14 PM
As Usual it did
Thank Paresh
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