160
C
HAPTER
19: Q
IN
Q C
ONFIGURATION
■
Saves public network VLAN ID resource.
■
You can have VLAN IDs of your own, which is independent of public network
VLAN IDs.
■
Provides simple Layer 2 VPN solutions for small-sized MANs or intranets.
Implementation of QinQ
QinQ can be implemented by enabling the QinQ function on ports.
With the QinQ function enabled for a port, the switch will tag a received packet
with the default VLAN tag of the receiving port no matter whether or not the
packet already carries a VLAN tag, and the switch will learn the source MAC
address of the packet into the MAC address table of the default VLAN. If the
packet already carries a VLAN tag, the packet becomes a dual-tagged packet.
Otherwise, the packet becomes a packet carrying the default VLAN tag of the
port.
Inner-to-Outer Tag
Priority Mapping
As shown in Figure 45, IEEE 802.1Q defines the structure of tagged packets in
Ethernet frames:
Figure 45
The structure of tagged packets of Ethernet frames
The user priority field is the 802.1p priority of the tag. This 3-bit field is in the
range of 0 to 7. Through configuring inner-to-outer tag priority mapping for a
QinQ-enabled port, you can assign different priority for the outer tag of a packet
according to its inner tag priority.
Refer to
“Setting Port Priority” on page 666
for the detailed configurations about
priority mapping.
QinQ Configuration
Configuration
Prerequisites
Make sure that Voice VLAN is not enabled for the port where QinQ is to be
enabled. The QinQ feature is mutually exclusive with the Voice VLAN feature.
n
BPDU tunnel is a specific application of the QinQ feature. The BPDU tunnel feature
uses the
vlan-vpn tunnel
command to transmit the customers’ MSTP packets
transparently through the service provider’s network. Refer to “BPDU Tunnel
Configuration” on page 272.
Configuration Procedure
User Priority CFI
DA
SA
VLAN Tag Etype
DATA
FCS
TPID
VLAN ID
6bytes
6bytes
4bytes
2bytes
3bits
1bit
12bits
4bytes
2bytes
46
̚
1500bytes
Table 98
Configure QinQ
Operation Command Description
Enter system view
system-view
-
Summary of Contents for Switch 7754
Page 32: ...32 CHAPTER 1 CLI OVERVIEW ...
Page 70: ...70 CHAPTER 5 LOGGING IN USING MODEM ...
Page 76: ...76 CHAPTER 7 LOGGING IN THROUGH NMS ...
Page 86: ...86 CHAPTER 9 CONFIGURATION FILE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 120: ...120 CHAPTER 13 ISOLATE USER VLAN CONFIGURATION ...
Page 126: ...126 CHAPTER 14 SUPER VLAN ...
Page 136: ...136 CHAPTER 16 IP PERFORMANCE CONFIGURATION ...
Page 152: ...152 CHAPTER 17 IPX CONFIGURATION ...
Page 164: ...164 CHAPTER 19 QINQ CONFIGURATION ...
Page 172: ...172 CHAPTER 21 SHARED VLAN CONFIGURATION ...
Page 182: ...182 CHAPTER 22 PORT BASIC CONFIGURATION ...
Page 198: ...198 CHAPTER 24 PORT ISOLATION CONFIGURATION ...
Page 208: ...208 CHAPTER 25 PORT SECURITY CONFIGURATION ...
Page 224: ...224 CHAPTER 27 DLDP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 232: ...232 CHAPTER 28 MAC ADDRESS TABLE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 240: ...240 CHAPTER 29 CENTRALIZED MAC ADDRESS AUTHENTICATION CONFIGURATION ...
Page 280: ...280 CHAPTER 30 MSTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 348: ...348 CHAPTER 35 IS IS CONFIGURATION ...
Page 408: ...408 CHAPTER 39 802 1X CONFIGURATION ...
Page 412: ...412 CHAPTER 40 HABP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 422: ...422 CHAPTER 41 MULTICAST OVERVIEW ...
Page 426: ...426 CHAPTER 42 GMRP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 480: ...480 CHAPTER 47 PIM CONFIGURATION ...
Page 506: ...506 CHAPTER 48 MSDP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 552: ...552 CHAPTER 51 TRAFFIC ACCOUNTING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 570: ...570 CHAPTER 53 HA CONFIGURATION ...
Page 582: ...582 CHAPTER 54 ARP CONFIGURATION SwitchA arp protective down recover interval 200 ...
Page 622: ...622 CHAPTER 58 DHCP RELAY AGENT CONFIGURATION ...
Page 684: ...684 CHAPTER 61 QOS CONFIGURATION ...
Page 718: ...718 CHAPTER 63 CLUSTER ...
Page 738: ...738 CHAPTER 67 UDP HELPER CONFIGURATION ...
Page 752: ...752 CHAPTER 69 RMON CONFIGURATION ...
Page 772: ...772 CHAPTER 70 NTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 796: ...796 CHAPTER 72 FILE SYSTEM MANAGEMENT ...
Page 802: ...802 CHAPTER 73 BIMS CONFIGURATION ...
Page 814: ...814 CHAPTER 74 FTP AND TFTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 830: ...830 CHAPTER 75 INFORMATION CENTER ...
Page 836: ...836 CHAPTER 76 DNS CONFIGURATION ...
Page 852: ...852 CHAPTER 77 BOOTROM AND HOST SOFTWARE LOADING ...
Page 858: ...858 CHAPTER 78 BASIC SYSTEM CONFIGURATION DEBUGGING ...