Actually the "uplink" port on most hubs is simply a crossed-over regular
port, so assuming your distances and hops are within the spec, you can use
a crossover cable between two of the same kind of ports (uplink or
regular) or a non-crossover between the two (one side uplink , the other
side regula
On Sun, Jul 22, 2001 at 05:42:32PM -0400, Sunny Dubey wrote:
| hey,
|
| I have two hubs, and I'd like to be able to connect them to each other. Both
| have a port called "uplink port", do I need to use a cross over cable to
| connect both hubs using their uplink ports, or should I use a normal
>hey,
>
>I have two hubs, and I'd like to be able to connect them to each other.
Both
>have a port called "uplink port", do I need to use a cross over cable to
>connect both hubs using their uplink ports, or should I use a normal cable
to
>connect the both of them?
No you don't. Connecting two sim
On Sun, 22 Jul 2001 17:42:32 EDT, Sunny Dubey writes:
>I have two hubs, and I'd like to be able to connect them to each other. Both
>have a port called "uplink port", do I need to use a cross over cable to
>connect both hubs using their uplink ports, or should I use a normal cable to
>connect
hey,
I have two hubs, and I'd like to be able to connect them to each other. Both
have a port called "uplink port", do I need to use a cross over cable to
connect both hubs using their uplink ports, or should I use a normal cable to
connect the both of them?
thanks
Sunny Dubey
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