12 tunneling vlan packets across mans, 1 stackable vlan components, Tunneling vlan packets across mans -19 – Riverstone Networks WICT1-12 User Manual

Page 83: Stackable vlan components -19, Figure 5-3

Advertising
background image

Riverstone Networks RS Switch Router User Guide Release 8.0 5-19

Bridging Configuration Guide

Tunneling VLAN packets across MANs

5.12 TUNNELING VLAN PACKETS ACROSS MANS

The “stackable” VLAN feature on the RS allows you to tunnel multiple VLANs through a metropolitan area network
(MAN) over a single backbone VLAN. This feature provides the following benefits:

Traffic for multiple VLANs, or traffic for multiple customers, can be aggregated to run through a
MAN over a single backbone VLAN. The RS supports a maximum of 4094 customers or VLANs
and up to 4094 backbone VLANs.

Spanning tree and rapid spanning tree protocols can be run in customer-specific VLANs; no
reconfiguration of customer-specific VLANs is needed.

Per-VLAN spanning tree can be run in the backbone VLAN.

5.12.1

Stackable VLAN Components

The following figure illustrates the basic components of the stackable VLAN. Routers R1 and R2 switch traffic for
customers C1 and C2 through the MAN. Ports et.2.1 on R1 and et.6.1 on R2 belong to customer C1’s VLAN, “BLUE”
while ports et.3.1 on R1 and et. 7.1 on R2 belong to customer C2’s VLAN, “GREEN.” Traffic entering any of these
four ports are tagged with the appropriate customer VLAN ID (BLUE or GREEN) in an IEEE 802.1q header.

Figure 5-3 Stackable VLAN components

The VLAN RED is the backbone VLAN, which allows traffic from various VLANs to be tunneled
through the MAN.

Ports

et.4.1

on R1 and

et.5.1

on R2 are tunnel backbone ports, which are trunk ports through which

the VLAN traffic is tunneled. Tunnel backbone ports must be configured as trunk ports so that they
maintain the encapsulated 802.1q header. You configure these ports as both trunk ports and tunnel
backbone ports with the

stackable-vlan

option of the

vlan make trunk-port

CLI command.

Ports

et.2.1

and

et.3.1

on R1 are tunnel entry ports, which are access ports on which the VLAN

traffic to be tunneled enters R1. Ports

et. 6.1

and

et.7.1

on R2 are tunnel exit ports, which are access

ports on which the tunneled traffic exits R2. You configure the mapping of the tunnel entry and
tunnel exit ports to the backbone VLAN with the

vlan enable stackable-vlan

CLI command.

et.2.1

et.3.1

et.4.1

et.5.1

et.6.1

et.7.1

R1

R2

MAN

RED VLAN (backbone)

BLUE VLAN

GREEN VLAN

C1

C2

C1

C2

Advertising