IEEE 802.1Q

IEEE 802.1Q is the networking standard that supports virtual LANs (VLANs) on an Ethernet network. The standard defines a system of VLAN tagging for Ethernet frames and the accompanying procedures to be used by bridges and switches in handling such frames. The standard also contains provisions for a quality-of-service prioritization scheme commonly known as IEEE 802.1p and defines the Generic Attribute Registration Protocol.

Portions of the network which are VLAN-aware (i.e., IEEE 802.1Q conformant) can include VLAN tags. When a frame enters the VLAN-aware portion of the network, a tag is added to represent the VLAN membership.[lower-alpha 1] Each frame must be distinguishable as being within exactly one VLAN. A frame in the VLAN-aware portion of the network that does not contain a VLAN tag is assumed to be flowing on the native VLAN.

The standard was developed by IEEE 802.1, a working group of the IEEE 802 standards committee, and continues to be actively revised. One of the notable revisions is 802.1Q-2014 which incorporated IEEE 802.1aq (Shortest Path Bridging) and much of the IEEE 802.1D standard.[1]

Frame format

Insertion of 802.1Q tag in an Ethernet frame

802.1Q adds a 32-bit field between the source MAC address and the EtherType fields of the original frame. The minimum frame size is left unchanged at 64 bytes.[2] The maximum frame size is extended from 1,518 bytes to 1,522 bytes. Two bytes are used for the tag protocol identifier (TPID), the other two bytes for tag control information (TCI). The TCI field is further divided into PCP, DEI, and VID.[3]

802.1Q tag format
16 bits 3 bits 1 bit 12 bits
TPID TCI
PCP DEI VID

For frames using IEEE 802.2/SNAP encapsulation with an organizationally unique identifier (OUI) field of 00-00-00 (so that the protocol ID field in the SNAP header is an EtherType), as would be the case on LANs other than Ethernet, the EtherType value in the SNAP header is set to 0x8100 and the aforementioned extra 4 bytes are appended after the SNAP header.

Because inserting the VLAN tag changes the frame, 802.1Q encapsulation forces a recalculation of the original frame check sequence field in the Ethernet trailer.

The IEEE 802.3ac standard increased the maximum Ethernet frame size from 1518 bytes to 1522 bytes to accommodate the four-byte VLAN tag. Some network devices that do not support the larger frame size will process these frames successfully, but may report them as "baby giant" anomalies.[8]

Double tagging

With the IEEE standard 802.1ad, double-tagging can be useful for Internet service providers, allowing them to use VLANs internally while mixing traffic from clients that are already VLAN-tagged. The outer (next to source MAC and representing ISP VLAN) S-TAG (service tag) comes first, followed by the inner C-TAG (customer tag). In such cases, 802.1ad specifies a TPID of 0x88a8 for service-provider outer S-TAG.

Insertion of 802.1ad double tag in an Ethernet frame

Multiple VLAN Registration Protocol

IEEE 802.1Q defines the Multiple VLAN Registration Protocol (MVRP), an application of the Multiple Registration Protocol, allowing bridges to negotiate the set of VLANs to be used over a specific link.

MVRP replaced the slower GARP VLAN Registration Protocol (GVRP) in 2007 with the IEEE 802.1ak-2007 amendment.

Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol

The 2003 revision of the standard included the Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP) which was originally defined in IEEE 802.1s.

See also

Notes

  1. VLAN membership is determined by the frame's port or the port/protocol combination, depending on whether port-based or port-and-protocol-based VLAN classification is being used.
  2. This field was formerly designated Canonical Format Indicator (CFI) with a value of 0 indicating a MAC address in canonical format. It is always set to zero for Ethernet. CFI was used for compatibility between Ethernet and Token Ring networks. If a frame received at an Ethernet port had a CFI set to 1, then that frame would not be bridged to an untagged port.[5]

Sources

References

  1. 802.1Q-2014 - Bridges and Bridged Networks
  2. Per IEEE 802.3-2005 clause 3.5, a 42-octet minimum applies when 802.1Q is present; when absent, a 46-octet minimum applies.
  3. IEEE 802.1Q-2011 clause 9.6
  4. IEEE 802.1Q I.4 Traffic types and priority values
  5. IEEE 802.1Q-2005 clause 9.6
  6. IEEE 802.1Q-2011 clause 6.9.3
  7. IEEE 802.1Q-2005, 9.6 VLAN Tag Control Information
  8. Understanding Baby Giant/Jumbo Frames Support on Catalyst 4000/4500 with Supervisor III/IV (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-04-02
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