Configuring MAC Pinning on Trunk Interfaces for Bridge Domains in a Virtual Switch
A MAC move occurs when a MAC address frequently appears on a different physical interface than the one it was learned on. Frequent MAC moves indicate the presence of loops. To avoid loops across interfaces in virtual switches, you can configure MAC pinning.
This topic describes how to configure MAC pinning on a trunk interface for a bridge domain in a virtual switch. A virtual switch represents a Layer 2 network as it filters and forwards traffic only at the data link layer. Each bridge domain in a virtual switch participates in Layer 2 Learning and Forwarding. When a trunk interface for a bridge domain receives a packet tagged with a VLAN ID that matches the list of VLAN IDs specified with the bridge domain, the packet is then forwarded within the bridge domain that is configured with the matching VLAN ID.
To configure MAC pinning on trunk interfaces for bridge domains in a virtual switch: