Vlan commands, Double vlan mode – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 717

Advertising
background image

VLAN Commands

717

36

VLAN Commands

PowerConnect 802.1Q VLANs are an implementation of the Virtual Local

Area Network, specification 802.1Q. Operating at Layer 2 of the OSI model,

the VLAN is a means of parsing a single network into logical user groups or

organizations as if they physically resided on a dedicated LAN segment of

their own. In reality, this virtually defined community may have individual

members scattered across a large, extended LAN. The VLAN identifier is part

of the 802.1Q tag, which is added to an Ethernet frame by an 802.1Q-

compliant switch or router. Devices recognizing 802.1Q-tagged frames

maintain appropriate tables to track VLANs. The first 3 bits of the 802.1Q tag

are used by 802.1p to establish priority for the packet.
PowerConnect supports 802.1Q VLANs. As such, ports may simultaneously

belong to multiple VLANs. VLANs allow a network to be logically segmented

without regard to the physical locations of devices in the network.
PowerConnect switching supports up to 1024 VLANs for forwarding.
VLANs can be allocated by subnet and netmask pairs, thus allowing

overlapping subnets. For example, subnet 10.10.128.0 with Mask

255.255.128.0 and subnet 10.10.0.0 with Mask 255.255.0.0 can have different

VLAN associations.

Double VLAN Mode

An incoming frame is identified as tagged or untagged based on Tag Protocol

Identifier (TPID) value it contains. The 802.1Q standard specifies a TPID

value (0x8100) to recognize an incoming frame as tagged or untagged. Any

valid Ethernet frame with a value 0x8100 in the 12th and 13th bytes is

recognized as tagged frame. 802.1Q switches check the 12th and 13th bytes to

decide the tag status of incoming frame.
The PowerConnect switching component can be configured to enable the

port in double-VLAN (DVLAN) mode. In this mode switch looks for 12th,

13th, 16th, and 17th bytes for the tag status in the incoming frame. The outer

tag (S-TAG) TPID is identified with the 12th and 13th bytes values. The

inner tag (C-TAG) TPID is identified with 16th and 17th bytes values. These

2CSPC4.XModular-SWUM200.book Page 717 Thursday, March 10, 2011 11:18 AM

Advertising