Okay, I’ve been watching lots of YouTube videos about switches and I’ve just made myself more confused. Managed versus unmanaged seems to be having a GUI versus not having a GUI, but why would anyone want a GUI on a switch? Shouldn’t your router do that? Also, a switch is like a tube station for local traffic, essentially an extension lead, so why do some have fans?

  • @Forne
    link
    English
    1
    edit-2
    7 months ago

    The router does the routing from one vlan into another. The switch has a funktion to apply the traffic with a specific vlan-tag. E.g. On the switch: to your PC vlan 3 could be applied and for your fridge vlan 25. On the router: You can allow vlan 3 access to the Internet but vlan 25 not. For management purposes you could allow vlan 3 access to vlan 25 but not the other way around.

      • borari
        link
        fedilink
        English
        27 months ago

        You’ve run up against the first thing that seems to really confuse people when they begin learning about networking.

        What you thought of as a LAN is a LAN. A VLAN is a Virtual LAN. It’s the same concept but virtualized, allowing more than one LAN on hardware that is just physically a single LAN.

        When most people are talking about setting up VLANs they are usually describing the creation of a separate layer 3 subnet and the creation of a VLAN ID that gets tagged to all packets that get sent on that separate subnet. This allows for both layer 2 and 3 separation of the virtual lans on a single physical network.

        Conceptually it’s very similar to VM’s running on a single server.

        • @[email protected]OP
          link
          fedilink
          English
          17 months ago

          So what differentiates a virtual LAN from a real LAN? Like how can I tell which one my ISP had set-up?