I did a bit of reading last night and went into the CONSOLE this morning, logged in, entered CONFIGURE and then IP ROUTING. Saved the configuration and rebooted the switch with no change.
After the reboot, I went into NETWORK ADMINISTRATION -> PORT SETTINGS -> PORTS -> PORT PROFILE and set the TRUNK ports to PROFILE-SWITCH which now allows my machines on 199.5.249 to see the X4012 at 199.5.249.175 (sadly, not 192.168.2.1 or 192.168.18.175, which makes me think that the switch still isn't routing). Is it possible that I'll simply have to segment the switch into a couple of VLANS (192.168.18 and 199.5.249) and purchase a router to connect the 2 VLANS together?
Thank you so much! Sorry I haven't replied in a while. I'm still stuck at the same spot. I reset the switch and started over (a few times). I configured the switch the same way as before, but now I set VLAN1 to 192.168.1.175 and added VLAN2 at 192.168.2.175 and VLAN4 at 192.168.4.175. I'm not planning on doing anything with VLAN1 at this time.
I set Port-9 to VLAN2 and Port-12 to VLAN4. I then hooked up a couple of laptops to these ports. The laptops can ping the switch (x4012) at 192.168.2.175 and 192.168.4.175 (with those IPs set as the laptop's gateway addresses) but they can't ping across (182.168.2.x can't ping anything at 192.168.4.x and vice versa) the switch or each other.
Not sure what I'm missing, Also, could you explain what you meant by "For these connections the switch should be placed in access mode for the desired VLAN"?
EdgyB
3 Posts
0
June 5th, 2018 05:00
I did a bit of reading last night and went into the CONSOLE this morning, logged in, entered CONFIGURE and then IP ROUTING. Saved the configuration and rebooted the switch with no change.
After the reboot, I went into NETWORK ADMINISTRATION -> PORT SETTINGS -> PORTS -> PORT PROFILE and set the TRUNK ports to PROFILE-SWITCH which now allows my machines on 199.5.249 to see the X4012 at 199.5.249.175 (sadly, not 192.168.2.1 or 192.168.18.175, which makes me think that the switch still isn't routing). Is it possible that I'll simply have to segment the switch into a couple of VLANS (192.168.18 and 199.5.249) and purchase a router to connect the 2 VLANS together?
EdgyB
3 Posts
0
June 13th, 2018 07:00
Thank you so much! Sorry I haven't replied in a while. I'm still stuck at the same spot. I reset the switch and started over (a few times). I configured the switch the same way as before, but now I set VLAN1 to 192.168.1.175 and added VLAN2 at 192.168.2.175 and VLAN4 at 192.168.4.175. I'm not planning on doing anything with VLAN1 at this time.
I set Port-9 to VLAN2 and Port-12 to VLAN4. I then hooked up a couple of laptops to these ports. The laptops can ping the switch (x4012) at 192.168.2.175 and 192.168.4.175 (with those IPs set as the laptop's gateway addresses) but they can't ping across (182.168.2.x can't ping anything at 192.168.4.x and vice versa) the switch or each other.
Not sure what I'm missing, Also, could you explain what you meant by "For these connections the switch should be placed in access mode for the desired VLAN"?