PLANET ISW-1022MPT User Manual

Page 80

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User’s Manual of ISW-1022M Series and ISW-1033MT

80

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The tagging feature allows VLAN to span multiple 802.1Q-compliant switches through a single physical

connection and allows Spanning Tree to be enabled on all ports and work normally.

Some relevant terms:

Tagging

- The act of putting 802.1Q VLAN information into the header of a packet.

Untagging

- The act of stripping 802.1Q VLAN information out of the packet header.

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802.1Q VLAN Tags

The figure below shows the 802.1Q VLAN tag. There are four additional octets inserted after the source MAC address.

Their presence is indicated by a value of 0x8100 in the Ether Type field. When a packet's Ether Type field is equal to

0x8100

, the packet carries the IEEE 802.1Q/802.1p tag. The tag is contained in the following two octets and consists of 3

bits of user priority, 1 bit of Canonical Format Identifier (CFI - used for encapsulating Token Ring packets so they can be

carried across Ethernet backbones), and 12 bits of VLAN ID (VID). The 3 bits of user priority are used by 802.1p. The VID

is the VLAN identifier and is used by the 802.1Q standard. Because the VID is 12 bits long, 4094 unique VLAN can be

identified.

The tag is inserted into the packet header making the entire packet longer by 4 octets. All of the information originally

contained in the packet is retained.

802.1Q Tag

User Priority

CFI

VLAN ID (VID)

3 bits

1 bits

12 bits

TPID (Tag Protocol Identifier)

TCI (Tag Control Information)

2

bytes 2

bytes

Preamble

Destination

Address

Source

Address

VLAN TAG

Ethernet

Type

Data FCS

6 bytes

6 bytes

4 bytes

2 bytes

46-1517 bytes 4 bytes

The Ether Type and VLAN ID are inserted after the MAC source address, but before the original Ether Type/Length or

Logical Link Control. Because the packet is now a bit longer than it was originally, the Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC)

must be recalculated.

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