Total 29 results found for the keyword of "eos section 21 1 vlan introduction"
... Verification
Configuring Priority-Flow-Control (PFC)
Configuring PFC Watchdog
DCBX and Flow Control Commands
introduction
eos implements Link Layer Discovery
Protocol (LLDP) and the Data ...
... Across VRF
The eos DHCP relay agent supports forwarding of DHCP requests to DHCP servers located in a different VRF to the DHCP client interface VRF. In order to enable VRF support for the DHCP relay ...
... is a layer 2 feature that is configured on LAN switches. The Arista eos switch supports Option-37 insertion that allows relay agents to provide remote-ID information in DHCP request packets. DHCP servers ...
... mode as shown below.
(config)# management ssh
(config-mgmt-ssh)# ip access-group [vrf ] in
(config-mgmt-ssh)# ipv6 access-group [vrf ] in
In eos 4.19.0, all VRFs are required to use the same ...
...
MACsec encryption is a eos licensed feature. A valid MACsec license must be configured on a switch. MACsec licenses are tied to a switch serial number and the licensee. Every switch running MACsec ...
... full10G Not Present
Et4/7 connected1 full10G Not Present
Et4/8 connected1 full10G Not Present
Et4/9 connected1 full10G Not Present
switch>
Referencing Multi-lane Ports
eos supports two types of ...
... (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. ...
... behavior.
Note: It is highly recommended that both MLAG peer switches are identical platforms and run
identical eos images. Running different images/platform may result in a failure to form an
association ...
... Sockets Layer (SSL), is a security protocol used
to communicate between client and server. It establishes an encrypted
communication channel to secure data.
By default, eos uses a self signed certificate ...