Even a person who doesn't know about Network can easily understand the way you teach. You are the best teacher to make anyone understand easily about any complex topics. Thank you so much for your video which really helped me to understand the basics of VXLAN. Expecting more topics from you. Will subscribe to your channel and make use of your knowledge.
Excellent and simple, great information, definitely simplified and got to understand the general concept. It will be great to have a demo next time in a real L2 or L3 switch. Thanks again!
Thank you for sharing this video. I think I got most of the concept of vxlan except the multicasting part. Are you thinking about making a clip about multicasting? That would be awesome
really i was confused about vxlan before. after watching this video really I am happy and make sense regarding vxlan. you are awesome. may I have more video regarding vxlan or datacenter environment.
Thanks Joe! To me this sounds unneccesarily more complicated than VLAN. Also, it looks like the spine/leaf top is a single point of failure as well. I might have misunderstood lots of it but that’s my first impression.
Thank you so much for this video . Please continue to do more videos..its a greatsession.. people who is aware of vlans they can easily understand vxlan by watching your video..much appreciated..
At 22.00, how SW 1 determines this machine belongs to VXLAN 10011? Is the port on SW1 configured so? What if there are multiple virtual devices are physically connected to that same port on SW-1?
Using the Spine Leaf architecture, I don’t believe you’ll have any issues. For every two or more leaf switches, you might need a spine. This would help scale your network. Vteps are like trunk links except they are not physically connected but logically. The number of vteps created on 10 leaf switches will also be determined by the number of spine switches in the topology.
But still what's the benefit? I would just use trunk links... Could you give me a real example or escenario where one would be benefit of using vxlan over traditional trunk links?
Great informative useful helpful video I need to fave and finish watching later. Am signed in but can only find controls for shit the engineers may be proud of but is probably useless to me...like goddamn "remix". WTF it's not an audio track. Fucking TH-cam app. Guess if they don't decide to hide or otherwise reformat viewing history in their incessant fucking with shit pushing unrequested reconfiguring updates it'll still be in my history. IDK how or where to complain to them about it but I'm just saying something because I know at times they've also not minded alienating content publishers. 😐 Thanks again, helpful info in this video.
I'm sorry---This was helpful--but it was hard to follow--it was slow and I could not watch it without wanting to skip ahead----You should have started with your summary then went into detail
Unfortunately this video contains some mistakes, first of all 802.1Q is using Tagging and not encapsulation as you are telling and the diagram showing the 802.1Q frame is also wrong, as the 802.1Q Tag is inserted into the frame and not added at the front of it.
Even a person who doesn't know about Network can easily understand the way you teach. You are the best teacher to make anyone understand easily about any complex topics. Thank you so much for your video which really helped me to understand the basics of VXLAN. Expecting more topics from you. Will subscribe to your channel and make use of your knowledge.
Finally a video I really found useful for me to understand vxlan. You made it seem plain and simple! thanks!
I knew nothing about vxlan.... but after your teaching, I got an overall idea... thanks
This is the best and easiest to understand Vxlan illustration on the entire Internet. Thanks man 👍
Is a pity you stopped doing videos, this is one of the best training videos I have came accross.
Amazing Explanation. Probably the best one I have come across. Thanks Joe
Thank you very much for simple explanation of VXLAN using VLAN 802.1Q basics
Brilliant! it takes a great mind to make complex things into simple thought process and terms. Thanks for the video!
Beautiful,,Marvellous, Awesome,Splendid explanation ever encountered ...MANY MANY THANX...
Best explanation I have seen on vxLAN by a mile.
well explained mate..This is the best video which i found on VXLAN
Wow this is the best VXLAN video I've seen in TH-cam. Thank you Joe, more of these contents please! **auto subscribed.**
Thanks Joe , one of the best video explanation on VXLAN I have seen on Internet. Keep going
Thanks Joe, this is one of the best VxLAN video on internet.
Very good simplified explanation, definitely great technical presentation
Thank you for defining the VXLANs in a simple and easy way... Thumbs up 👍🏻👍🏻
wow
thats so easy to understand concept of VXLAN
😊 thank you
It really helps me to clear the vxlan concept. Thank you
This is a very helpful video.
Very clear.
Well done!
Thanks a lot.
Really nice video in order to know the basic in the VXLAN world.
Thank you so much for this excellent video! 😊
It seems like you have two ports with the same name on sw-2 e1/3 and e1/3. Looks like you meant e1/3 and e1/4.
Excellent presentation. Thankyou
Excellent and simple, great information, definitely simplified and got to understand the general concept. It will be great to have a demo next time in a real L2 or L3 switch. Thanks again!
Thank you for sharing this video. I think I got most of the concept of vxlan except the multicasting part. Are you thinking about making a clip about multicasting? That would be awesome
really i was confused about vxlan before. after watching this video really I am happy and make sense regarding vxlan. you are awesome. may I have more video regarding vxlan or datacenter environment.
Great explanation
Sir thanks for sharing. May I know where do you get the router image to deloyment this simulator.
best explain ever, thanks
Ok, it was a great introduction video. Thank you !
The best explanation of vxlan stuff so far. Thanks a lot
Awesome explanation!! very well conveyed, clearly understood!!
thank u , it cleared up alot of confusion 😕
thanks for the video. I was wondering what is the port configuration between SW-1 and SW-3 and SW-3 and SW-2 ?
Thanks Joe!
To me this sounds unneccesarily more complicated than VLAN.
Also, it looks like the spine/leaf top is a single point of failure as well.
I might have misunderstood lots of it but that’s my first impression.
The best explanation.
Is spine/leaf basically the same description as the 3 tier and collapsed core?
Thank you so much for this video . Please continue to do more videos..its a greatsession.. people who is aware of vlans they can easily understand vxlan by watching your video..much appreciated..
Great job.. thank you..
very clear ! thanks and nice work
Thank you @Joe , this was quite helpful!
Excellent video!!!
😊 great explanation
Great Explanation
At 22.00, how SW 1 determines this machine belongs to VXLAN 10011? Is the port on SW1 configured so? What if there are multiple virtual devices are physically connected to that same port on SW-1?
Thanks for the simplification of this content.
great video...expecting more videos...example EVPN
Amazing video. Thank you!
very usefull, thank you
Fantastically well presented video. Great work.
good jobs, help me a lot
nicely explained..
Very good video. Is it possible to get slide deck?
thanks for the intro. If I have 10 access switches, how many vteps do I need to connect them together? isn't there a scaling problem?
Using the Spine Leaf architecture, I don’t believe you’ll have any issues. For every two or more leaf switches, you might need a spine. This would help scale your network. Vteps are like trunk links except they are not physically connected but logically. The number of vteps created on 10 leaf switches will also be determined by the number of spine switches in the topology.
Thank You !!!
Brilliant. Clear and coherent.
thanks very simple and informative
But still what's the benefit? I would just use trunk links... Could you give me a real example or escenario where one would be benefit of using vxlan over traditional trunk links?
Great video! Thanks!
100 out of 10 in detail.
Brilliant, Joe
cool, but why on earth would you go for this mega complex design when the regular vlans can do a similar job?
Thank you so much nice video
Thanks Joe, very informative.
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Great Job! Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for the presentation, well done , but when i need to do it instead to 802.1q
Awesome, you nailed it!!
Thanks sir
Well explained .
Great informative useful helpful video I need to fave and finish watching later. Am signed in but can only find controls for shit the engineers may be proud of but is probably useless to me...like goddamn "remix". WTF it's not an audio track. Fucking TH-cam app. Guess if they don't decide to hide or otherwise reformat viewing history in their incessant fucking with shit pushing unrequested reconfiguring updates it'll still be in my history. IDK how or where to complain to them about it but I'm just saying something because I know at times they've also not minded alienating content publishers. 😐 Thanks again, helpful info in this video.
Pretty good one, Thanks!
Well done.
Very clear
also share LISP Protocol
IMHO VXLAN is what STP should have been in the first place but it would have been way too much overhead for the puny hardware at the time.
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I'm sorry---This was helpful--but it was hard to follow--it was slow and I could not watch it without wanting to skip ahead----You should have started with your summary then went into detail
Very slow Vedic
Unfortunately this video contains some mistakes, first of all 802.1Q is using Tagging and not encapsulation as you are telling and the diagram showing the 802.1Q frame is also wrong, as the 802.1Q Tag is inserted into the frame and not added at the front of it.