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Trunking in port facilities

Trunking in port facilities

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Devon_playz
Member
131
07-26-2023, 03:57 PM
#1
In Linus's networking videos, he explains port trunking as a method to boost transfer speeds by using additional cables and adjusting configurations. My take was that it scales throughput rather than changing individual transfer rates. Did I misunderstand or is there a special technique involved?
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Devon_playz
07-26-2023, 03:57 PM #1

In Linus's networking videos, he explains port trunking as a method to boost transfer speeds by using additional cables and adjusting configurations. My take was that it scales throughput rather than changing individual transfer rates. Did I misunderstand or is there a special technique involved?

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zordee
Junior Member
9
07-26-2023, 04:51 PM
#2
Varies based on configuration, but it's usually for several transfers, and Linus manages many users.
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zordee
07-26-2023, 04:51 PM #2

Varies based on configuration, but it's usually for several transfers, and Linus manages many users.

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Jedi_Jake
Junior Member
24
07-26-2023, 07:34 PM
#3
I've confirmed that in several videos Linus explained lacp boosts performance mainly when multiple clients accessed it concurrently.
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Jedi_Jake
07-26-2023, 07:34 PM #3

I've confirmed that in several videos Linus explained lacp boosts performance mainly when multiple clients accessed it concurrently.

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dragoncat003
Junior Member
16
07-27-2023, 07:24 AM
#4
Lacp performs some hashing to decide which link to forward. The choice of algorithm affects behavior (source Mac, target Mac, etc.), though it's usually about boosting bandwidth for several clients.
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dragoncat003
07-27-2023, 07:24 AM #4

Lacp performs some hashing to decide which link to forward. The choice of algorithm affects behavior (source Mac, target Mac, etc.), though it's usually about boosting bandwidth for several clients.

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Gruzifix
Junior Member
30
07-27-2023, 08:50 AM
#5
Trunking involves switching the port type to connect with another switch or router and supports VLAN traffic. Using lacp for bundling links refers to port aggregation or EtherChannel. Enabling trunking is necessary for aggregation. My belief is that with the load balancing lacp provides, it doesn’t split a single process onto multiple paths. It increases capacity and offers some redundancy. If a link in an aggregated connection fails, the connection remains active but loses bandwidth from that point. Let me know if you need more clarification.
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Gruzifix
07-27-2023, 08:50 AM #5

Trunking involves switching the port type to connect with another switch or router and supports VLAN traffic. Using lacp for bundling links refers to port aggregation or EtherChannel. Enabling trunking is necessary for aggregation. My belief is that with the load balancing lacp provides, it doesn’t split a single process onto multiple paths. It increases capacity and offers some redundancy. If a link in an aggregated connection fails, the connection remains active but loses bandwidth from that point. Let me know if you need more clarification.

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busyman201
Member
221
07-27-2023, 04:06 PM
#6
Users often refer to the same concept, as the original explanation provided clear details about aggregation. You can boost overall bandwidth by using a faster single interface (such as 10G) connected to fewer slower ones (like a bundle of 1G), provided the right hashing method is in place. In most cases, standard lacp configurations support broader connectivity across several links but don’t permit direct client-to-server transfers.
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busyman201
07-27-2023, 04:06 PM #6

Users often refer to the same concept, as the original explanation provided clear details about aggregation. You can boost overall bandwidth by using a faster single interface (such as 10G) connected to fewer slower ones (like a bundle of 1G), provided the right hashing method is in place. In most cases, standard lacp configurations support broader connectivity across several links but don’t permit direct client-to-server transfers.