Virtual Local Area Network - определение. Что такое Virtual Local Area Network
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Что (кто) такое Virtual Local Area Network - определение

NETWORK COMMUNICATIONS DOMAIN THAT IS ISOLATED AT THE DATA LINK LAYER
Virtual LAN; Vlan; Vlan Basics; Virtual Local Area Network; Vlan routing; Virtual local area network; VLANs
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Virtual Local Area Network         
<networking> (VLAN) A logical grouping of two or more nodes which are not necessarily on the same physical {network segment} but which share the same IP network number. This is often associated with switched Ethernet. IEEE 802.1Q is a VLAN standard. [Confirm? Better description? Reference?] (2002-08-30)
VLAN         
Virtual Local Area Network (Reference: LAN, IEEE 802.1q)
VLAN         
Virtual LAN         
<networking> Software defined groups of host on a {local area network} (LAN) that communicate as if they were on the same wire, even though they are physically on different {LAN segments} throughout a site. To define a virtual LAN, the network administrator uses a virtual LAN management utility to establish membersip rules that determine which hostss are in a specific virtual LAN. Many models may exist but two seem to dominate: (1) Vitual Segment (or Port-Group) Virtual LAN. These are switched at the data link layer (OSI layer 2). Virtual segments turn an arbitrary number of physical segments into a single virtual segment that funtions as a self-contained traffic domain. (2) Virtual Subnet Virtual LAN: These are switched at the Network Layer (OSI layer 3). Subnet-oriented virtual LANs are based on subnet addresses used by IP, IPX, and other network layer protocols to normally identify physical networks. Administrators assign one subnet address to a number of switch ports (which may be on different switches and over a backbone). Once identified as a virtual subnet, the selected LANs function as a bridge group - traffic is bridged at Layer 2 within the virtual subnet and routed at Layer 3 between virtual subnets. ["The many faces of virtual LANs", Steven King, Network World, 1994/5?]. (1995-04-03)
Virtual LAN         
A virtual LAN (VLAN) is any broadcast domain that is partitioned and isolated in a computer network at the data link layer (OSI layer 2).IEEE 802.
VLAN         
A virtual local area network (VLAN) is any broadcast domain that is partitioned and isolated in a computer network at the data link layer (OSI layer 2).IEEE 802.
VSAN         
SUBCLASS OF A STORAGE AREA NETWORK
Virtual san; Virtual storage area network; Vsan; Virtual Storage Area Network; Virtual SAN
A virtual storage area network (virtual SAN, VSAN or vSAN) is a logical representation of a physical storage area network (SAN). A VSAN abstracts the storage-related operations from the physical storage layer, and provides shared storage access to the applications and virtual machines by combining the servers' local storage over a network into a single or multiple storage pools.
Campus network         
COMPUTER NETWORK LINKING SMALLER NETWORKS OF A CAMPUS, SUCH AS FOR A BUSINESS OR UNIVERSITY
Campus Area Network; Corporate area network; University network; Corporate network; Corporate Area Network; Campus area network
A campus network, campus area network, corporate area network or CAN is a computer network made up of an interconnection of local area networks (LANs) within a limited geographical area.Edwards, Wade.
Virtual network operator         
PROVIDER OF MANAGEMENT SERVICES AND A RESELLER OF NETWORK SERVICES FROM OTHER TELECOMMUNICATIONS SUPPLIERS THAT DOES NOT OWN THE TELECOMMUNICATION INFRASTRUCTURE
Virtual Network Operator
A virtual network operator (VNO) or mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) is a provider of management services and a reseller of network services from other telecommunications suppliers that does not own the telecommunication infrastructure. These network providers are categorized as virtual because they provide network services to customers without owning the underlying network.
local area network         
  • A conceptual diagram of a local area network using [[bus network]] topology.
  • Twisted pair LAN cable
COMPUTER NETWORK THAT CONNECTS DEVICES OVER A LIMITED AREA
Local Area Network; Local network; Local Area networks; Local-area network; LAN troubleshooting; Zero-slot LAN; Local-area networks; LAN; Lan line; Local area Network; Local Area network; PC LAN; Local area network (LAN); Ping 0; LAN network; Local area networking; Hardware sharing; Multiple LAN Distribution; Local area networks; LAN application
<networking> (LAN) A data communications network which is geographically limited (typically to a 1 km radius) allowing easy interconnection of terminals, microprocessors and computers within adjacent buildings. Ethernet and FDDI are examples of standard LANs. Because the network is known to cover only a small area, optimisations can be made in the network signal protocols that permit data rates up to 100Mb/s. See also token ring, wide area network, {metropolitan area network}.. Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.dcom.lans.misc. (1995-03-13)

Википедия

VLAN

A virtual local area network (VLAN) is any broadcast domain that is partitioned and isolated in a computer network at the data link layer (OSI layer 2). In this context, virtual, refers to a physical object recreated and altered by additional logic, within the local area network. VLANs work by applying tags to network frames and handling these tags in networking systems – creating the appearance and functionality of network traffic that is physically on a single network but acts as if it is split between separate networks. In this way, VLANs can keep network applications separate despite being connected to the same physical network, and without requiring multiple sets of cabling and networking devices to be deployed.

VLANs allow network administrators to group hosts together even if the hosts are not directly connected to the same network switch. Because VLAN membership can be configured through software, this can greatly simplify network design and deployment. Without VLANs, grouping hosts according to their resource needs the labor of relocating nodes or rewiring data links. VLANs allow devices that must be kept separate to share the cabling of a physical network and yet be prevented from directly interacting with one another. This managed sharing yields gains in simplicity, security, traffic management, and economy. For example, a VLAN can be used to separate traffic within a business based on individual users or groups of users or their roles (e.g. network administrators), or based on traffic characteristics (e.g. low-priority traffic prevented from impinging on the rest of the network's functioning). Many Internet hosting services use VLANs to separate customers' private zones from one other, allowing each customer's servers to be grouped in a single network segment no matter where the individual servers are located in the data center. Some precautions are needed to prevent traffic "escaping" from a given VLAN, an exploit known as VLAN hopping.

To subdivide a network into VLANs, one configures network equipment. Simpler equipment might partition only each physical port (if even that), in which case each VLAN runs over a dedicated network cable. More sophisticated devices can mark frames through VLAN tagging, so that a single interconnect (trunk) may be used to transport data for multiple VLANs. Since VLANs share bandwidth, a VLAN trunk can use link aggregation, quality-of-service prioritization, or both to route data efficiently.