Enabling qinq tunneling on the switch, Figure 3-124, 1q tunnel status and ethernet type – LevelOne FGL-2870 User Manual

Page 277: Ee "enabling qinq tunneling on the

Advertising
background image

VLAN Configuration

3-223

3

Enabling QinQ Tunneling on the Switch

The switch can be configured to operate in normal VLAN mode or IEEE 802.1Q
(QinQ) tunneling mode which is used for passing Layer 2 traffic across a service
provider’s metropolitan area network. You can also globally set the Tag Protocol
Identifier (TPID) value of the tunnel port if the attached client is using a nonstandard
2-byte ethertype to identify 802.1Q tagged frames.

Command Usage
• Use the TPID field to set a custom 802.1Q ethertype value on the selected

interface. This feature allows the switch to interoperate with third-party switches
that do not use the standard 0x8100 ethertype to identify 802.1Q-tagged frames.
For example, if 0x1234 is set as the custom 802.1Q ethertype on a trunk port,
incoming frames containing that ethertype are assigned to the VLAN contained in
the tag following the ethertype field, as they would be with a standard 802.1Q trunk.
Frames arriving on the port containing any other ethertype are looked upon as
untagged frames, and assigned to the native VLAN of that port.

• All ports on the switch will be set to the same ethertype.

Command Attributes
802.1Q Tunnel Status – Sets the switch to QinQ mode, and allows the QinQ

tunnel port to be configured. The default is for the switch to function in normal
mode.

802.1Q Ethernet Type – The Tag Protocol Identifier (TPID) specifies the ethertype

of incoming packets on a tunnel port. (Range: hexadecimal 0800-FFFF;
Default: 8100)

Web – Click VLAN, 802.1Q VLAN, 802.1Q Tunnel Status. Check the Enabled box,
set the TPID of the ports if the client is using a non-standard ethertype to identify
802.1Q tagged frames, and click Apply.

Figure 3-124 802.1Q Tunnel Status and Ethernet Type

Advertising