Default layer 2 protocol tunneling configuration – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 451

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17-11

Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Software Configuration Guide

OL-13270-03

Chapter 17 Configuring IEEE 802.1Q and Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling

Configuring Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling

See

Figure 17-4

, with Customer X and Customer Y in access VLANs 30 and 40, respectively.

Asymmetric links connect the customers in Site 1 to edge switches in the service-provider network. The
Layer 2 PDUs (for example, BPDUs) coming into Switch B from Customer Y in Site 1 are forwarded to
the infrastructure as double-tagged packets with the well-known MAC address as the destination MAC
address. These double-tagged packets have the metro VLAN tag of 40, as well as an inner VLAN tag
(for example, VLAN 100). When the double-tagged packets enter Switch D, the outer VLAN tag 40 is
removed, the well-known MAC address is replaced with the respective Layer 2 protocol MAC address,
and the packet is sent to Customer Y on Site 2 as a single-tagged frame in VLAN 100.

You can also enable Layer 2 protocol tunneling on access ports on the edge switch connected to access
or trunk ports on the customer switch. In this case, the encapsulation and decapsulation process is the
same as described in the previous paragraph, except that the packets are not double-tagged in the
service-provider network. The single tag is the customer-specific access VLAN tag.

In switch stacks, Layer 2 protocol tunneling configuration is distributed among all stack members. Each
stack member that receives an ingress packet on a local port encapsulates or decapsulates the packet and
forwards it to the appropriate destination port. On a single switch, ingress Layer 2 protocol-tunneled
traffic is sent across all local ports in the same VLAN on which Layer 2 protocol tunneling is enabled.
In a stack, packets received by a Layer 2 protocol-tunneled port are distributed to all ports in the stack
that are configured for Layer 2 protocol tunneling and are in the same VLAN. All Layer 2 protocol
tunneling configuration is handled by the stack master and distributed to all stack members.

These sections contain this configuration information:

Default Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling Configuration, page 17-11

Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling Configuration Guidelines, page 17-12

Configuring Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling, page 17-13

Configuring Layer 2 Tunneling for EtherChannels, page 17-14

Default Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling Configuration

Table 17-1

shows the default Layer 2 protocol tunneling configuration.

Table 17-1

Default Layer 2 Ethernet Interface VLAN Configuration

Feature

Default Setting

Layer 2 protocol tunneling

Disabled.

Shutdown threshold

None set.

Drop threshold

None set.

CoS value

If a CoS value is configured on the interface for data packets, that
value is the default used for Layer 2 PDUs. If none is configured,
the default is 5.

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