PLANET GSW-1602SF User Manual

Page 63

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User’s Manual of GSW-1602SF / GSW-2404SF

Port VLAN ID

Packets that are tagged (are carrying the 802.1Q VID information) can be transmitted from one 802.1Q compliant network

device to another with the VLAN information intact. This allows 802.1Q VLAN to span network devices (and indeed, the

entire network – if all network devices are 802.1Q compliant).

Every physical port on a switch has a PVID. 802.1Q ports are also assigned a PVID, for use within the switch. If no VLAN

are defined on the switch, all ports are then assigned to a default VLAN with a PVID equal to 1. Untagged packets are

assigned the PVID of the port on which they were received. Forwarding decisions are based upon this PVID, in so far as

VLAN are concerned. Tagged packets are forwarded according to the VID contained within the tag. Tagged packets are

also assigned a PVID, but the PVID is not used to make packet forwarding decisions, the VID is.

Tag-aware switches must keep a table to relate PVID within the switch to VID on the network. The switch will compare the

VID of a packet to be transmitted to the VID of the port that is to transmit the packet. If the two VID are different the switch

will drop the packet. Because of the existence of the PVID for untagged packets and the VID for tagged packets, tag-aware

and tag-unaware network devices can coexist on the same network.

A switch port can have only one PVID, but can have as many VID as the switch has memory in its VLAN table to store them.

Because some devices on a network may be tag-unaware, a decision must be made at each port on a tag-aware device

before packets are transmitted – should the packet to be transmitted have a tag or not? If the transmitting port is connected

to a tag-unaware device, the packet should be untagged. If the transmitting port is connected to a tag-aware device, the

packet should be tagged.

Default VLANs

The Switch initially configures one VLAN, VID = 1, called "default." The factory default setting assigns all ports on the

Switch to the "default". As new VLAN are configured in Port-based mode, their respective member ports are removed

from the "default."

1

No matter what basis is used to uniquely identify end nodes and assign these nodes
VLAN membership, packets cannot cross VLAN without a network device performing a
routing function between the VLAN.

2

The Switch supports Port-based VLAN and IEEE 802.1Q VLAN. The port untagging
function can be used to remove the 802.1 tag from packet headers to maintain
compatibility with devices that are tag-unaware.

Assigning Ports to VLANs

Before enabling VLANs for the switch, you must first assign each port to the VLAN group(s) in which it will participate. By

default all ports are assigned to VLAN 1 as untagged ports. Add a port as a tagged port if you want it to carry traffic for one

or more VLANs, and any intermediate network devices or the host at the other end of the connection supports VLANs.

Then assign ports on the other VLAN-aware network devices along the path that will carry this traffic to the same VLAN(s),

either manually or dynamically using GVRP. However, if you want a port on this switch to participate in one or more VLANs,

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