Enabling jumbo frames to increase the mirroring path MTU
On 1-Gbps and 10-Gbps ports in the mirroring path, you can reduce the number of dropped frames by enabling
jumbo frames on all intermediate switches and routers. (The MTU on the switches covered by this manual is 9220
bytes for frames having an 802.1Q VLAN tag, and 9216 bytes for untagged frames.)
Table 30: Maximum frame sizes for mirroring
Frame type
configuration
Maximum
frame size
VLAN tag
Frame
mirrored
to local
port
Frame mirrored to remote
port
Data
Data
IPv4 header
Untagged
Non-jumbo (default
config.)
1518
0
1518
1464
54
Jumbo on all VLANs
9216
0
9216
9162
54
Jumbo
On all but
source VLAN
1518
0
n/a
1464
54
Tagged
Non-jumbo
1522
4
1522
1468
54
Jumbo
on all VLANs
9220
4
9218
9164
54
Jumbo
On all but
source VLAN
1522
4
n/a
1468
54
Jumbo frames are allowed on ports operating at or above 1 Gbps
For local mirroring, a non-jumbo configuration on the source VLAN dictates an MTU of 1518 bytes for untagged frames, and
an MTU of 1522 for tagged frames, regardless of the jumbo configuration on any other VLANs on the switch.
Effect of downstream VLAN tagging on untagged,
mirrored traffic
In a remote mirroring application, if mirrored traffic leaves the switch without 802.1Q VLAN tagging, but is
forwarded through a downstream device that adds 802.1Q VLAN tags, the MTU for untagged mirrored frames
leaving the source switch is reduced below the values shown in
Maximum frame sizes for mirroring
.
444
Aruba 2930F / 2930M Management and Configuration Guide
for ArubaOS-Switch 16.08