A VLAN is several end stations using a mutual pair of requirements, independent of actual location.
VLANs are typically connected with IP subnetworks. As an example, all of the end stations in a specific IP subnet belong to the same VLAN. Traffic between VLANs have to be routed. LAN interface VLAN membership is assigned manually on an interface-by-interface basis.
Virtual Extensible LAN (VXLAN) is a network virtualization technology that tries to ameliorate the scalability issues related to big cloud computing installations. It uses a VLAN- to encapsulate MAC-established OSI layer 2 Ethernet frames using 4789 as the default IANA-assigned destination UDP port number.[1]
VXLAN is a development of attempts to standardize on an overlay encapsulation protocol. It allows for layer 2 adjacency and increases scalability up. Unicast or multicast with HER (Head End Replication)[2] can be used to flood rat (program, multicast unknown destination address,) traffic.
VLANs are typically connected with IP subnetworks. As an example, all of the end stations in a specific IP subnet belong to the same VLAN. Traffic between VLANs have to be routed. LAN interface VLAN membership is assigned manually on an interface-by-interface basis.
Virtual Extensible LAN (VXLAN) is a network virtualization technology that tries to ameliorate the scalability issues related to big cloud computing installations. It uses a VLAN- to encapsulate MAC-established OSI layer 2 Ethernet frames using 4789 as the default IANA-assigned destination UDP port number.[1]
VXLAN is a development of attempts to standardize on an overlay encapsulation protocol. It allows for layer 2 adjacency and increases scalability up. Unicast or multicast with HER (Head End Replication)[2] can be used to flood rat (program, multicast unknown destination address,) traffic.