Cisco Modeling Labs v2.5
2.5.x
- Overview
- Product Documentation
- CML 2.5 Release Notes
- CML 2.5 Installation Guide
- CML 2.5 User Guide
- CML User's Guide
- Overview of CML 2.x
- Using CML and the HTML5 UI
- Dashboard
- Workbench
- Adding Nodes to a Lab
- Starting, Stopping, and Wiping Nodes
- Deleting Nodes
- Creating Links
- Rules for Creating Links and Interface Overprovisioning
- Adding Interfaces and Overprovisioning
- Overprovisioning Interfaces with Link Creation
- Hiding Links
- Starting Simulations
- Connecting to a Node's Console
- Changing Global Console Settings
- Download the Console History
- Setting CPU limit on node
- Launch sequencing and CPU limiting
- Stopping Simulations
- Annotations
- External Connectivity for Simulations
- Link Packet Capture
- Lab Sharing
- Console Server
- Breakout Tool
- Custom VM Images
- Creating a New Node Definition
- Viewing Resource Limits
- CML 2.5 Admin Guide
- Resources
External Connectivity with Trunking¶
The following video shows a complete, working example of using external connectivity with trunking. It explains how to set up a CML server so that you can multiplex multiple VLANs into CML and use them with External Connector nodes in your CML labs. The CML server runs as a VM on a VMware ESXi host, and a TOR switch trunks VLAN 10 and VLAN 20 into the VMware ESXi host where the CML VM runs. The External Connector nodes use custom bridge interfaces that correspond to the VLANs.