4 vlan setting, Vlan, Etting – PLANET FGSW-2620CS User Manual

Page 34

Advertising
background image

User’s Manual of FGSW-2620CS

4.4 VLAN Setting

A Virtual LAN (VLAN) is a logical network grouping that limits the broadcast domain. It allows you to isolate network traffic

so only members of the VLAN receive traffic from the same VLAN members. Basically, creating a VLAN from a switch is

logically equivalent of reconnecting a group of network devices to another Layer 2 switch. However, all the network devices

are still plug into the same switch physically.

The Switch supports IEEE 802.1Q (tagged-based) and Port-Base VLAN setting in web management page. In the default

configuration, VLAN support is “No VLAN”.

Port-based VLAN

Port-based VLAN limit traffic that flows into and out of switch ports. Thus, all devices connected to a port are members of

the VLAN(s) the port belongs to, whether there is a single computer directly connected to a switch, or an entire department.

On port-based VLAN.NIC do not need to be able to identify 802.1Q tags in packet headers. NIC send and receive normal

Ethernet packets. If the packet's destination lies on the same segment, communications take place using normal Ethernet

protocols. Even though this is always the case, when the destination for a packet lies on another switch port, VLAN con-

siderations come into play to decide if the packet is dropped by the Switch or delivered.

IEEE 802.1Q VLANs

IEEE 802.1Q (tagged) VLAN are implemented on the Switch. 802.1Q VLAN require tagging, which enables them to span

the entire network (assuming all switches on the network are IEEE 802.1Q-compliant).

VLAN allow a network to be segmented in order to reduce the size of broadcast domains. All packets entering a VLAN will

only be forwarded to the stations (over IEEE 802.1Q enabled switches) that are members of that VLAN, and this includes

broadcast, multicast and unicast packets from unknown sources.

VLAN can also provide a level of security to your network. IEEE 802.1Q VLAN will only deliver packets between stations

that are members of the VLAN. Any port can be configured as either tagging or untagging. The untagging feature of IEEE

802.1Q VLAN allows VLAN to work with legacy switches that don't recognize VLAN tags in packet headers. The tagging

feature allows VLAN to span multiple 802.1Q-compliant switches through a single physical connection and allows Span-

ning Tree to be enabled on all ports and work normally.

Any port can be configured as either tagging or untagging. The untagging feature of IEEE 802.1Q VLAN allows VLAN to

work with legacy switches that don’t recognize VLAN tags in packet headers. 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:

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

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

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.

- 34 -

Advertising