15-11
Cisco IE 2000 Switch Software Configuration Guide
OL-25866-01
Chapter 15 Configuring Interface Characteristics
How to Configure Interface Characteristics
Note You cannot configure a routing MTU size that exceeds the system MTU size. If you change the system
MTU size to a value smaller than the currently configured routing MTU size, the configuration change
is accepted, but not applied until the next switch reset. When the configuration change takes effect, the
routing MTU size automatically defaults to the new system MTU size.
Gigabit Ethernet ports are not affected by the system mtu command; 10/100 ports are not affected by
the system mtu jumbo command. If you d o not configure the system mtu jumbo command, the setting
of the system mtu command applies to all Gigabit Ethernet interfaces.
You cannot set the MTU size for an individual interface; you set it for all 10/100 or all Gigabit E thernet
interfaces. When you change the system or jumbo MTU size, you must reset the switch before the new
configuration takes effect.The system mtu routing command does not require a switch reset to take
effect.
Frames sizes that can be received by the switch CPU are limited to 1998 bytes, no matter what value was
entered with the system mtu or system mtu jumbo commands. Although frames that are forwarded or
routed are typically not received by the CPU, in some cases packets are sent to the CPU, such as traffic
sent to control traffic, SNMP, Telnet, or routing protocols.
Routed packets are subjected to MTU checks on the output ports. The MTU value used for routed ports
is derived from the applied system mtu value (not the system mtu jumbo value). That is, the routed
MTU is never greater than the system MTU for any VLAN. The routing protocols use the system MTU
value when negotiating adjacencies and the MTU of the link. For example, the Open Shortest Path First
(OSPF) protocol uses this MTU value before setting up an adjacency with a peer router. To view the
MTU value for routed packets for a specific VLAN, use the show platform port-asic mvid privileged
EXEC command.
Note If Layer 2 Gigabit Ethernet interfaces are configured to accept frames greater than the 10/100 interfaces,
jumbo frames received on a Layer 2 Gigabit Ethernet interface and sent on a Layer 2 10/100 interface
are dropped.
How to Configure Interface Characteristics

Configuring Layer 3 Interfaces

The switch does not support routing, but you can configure an IP address on an interface by using the no
switchport interface configuration command to facilitate device management.
The switch supports these types of Layer 3 interfaces:
SVIs: You should configure SVIs for any VLANs for which you want to route traffic. SVIs are
created when you enter a VLAN ID following the interface vlan global configuration command. To
delete an SVI, use the no interface vlan global configuration command. You cannot delete interface
VLAN 1.
Note When you create an SVI, it does not become active until it is associated with a physical port.
For information about assigning Layer 2 ports to VLANs, see Chapter 17, “Configuring
VLANs.”