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<pre>This is basically how the kernel does it. Each port of the switch is a
true Linux interface. You add routes to the interface, and the kernel
will offload it to the hardware. If you create a bridge and add
interfaces to the bridge, the kernel will offload it to the
hardware. If you use the team driver to create a LAG, and add
interfaces to it, the kernel will offload it to the hardware. All your
usual tools, routing daemon, snmp agents, just work.</pre>
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<p><span class="tlid-translation translation" tabindex="-1"><span
title="" class="">Can you give an example of equipment that I
can actually buy? All my professional life I use 1U x86 Linux
servers for NAT|Routing + L2 Switch for LACP's|VLAN's, and
always want something like this setup but in one box.<br>
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<p>k<br>
<span class="tlid-translation translation" tabindex="-1"><span
title="" class=""></span></span></p>
<p><span class="tlid-translation translation" tabindex="-1"><span
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