C
ONFIGURING
IEEE 802.1Q T
UNNELING
30-27
switchport dot1q-ethertype
This command sets the Tag Protocol Identifier (TPID) value of a tunnel
port. Use the no form. Use the
no
form to restore the default setting.
Syntax
switchport dot1q-ethertype
tpid
no switchport dot1q-ethertype
tpid
– Sets the ethertype value for 802.1Q encapsulation. This
identifier is used to select a nonstandard 2-byte ethertype to
identify 802.1Q tagged frames. The standard ethertype value is
0x8100. (Range: 0-ffff hexadecimal)
Default Setting
No dot1q-ethertype is set.
Command Mode
Interface Configuration (Ethernet, Port Channel)
Command Usage
• Use the
switchport dot1q-ethertype
command to set a custom
802.1Q ethertype value on the selected interface. This feature allows
the switch to interoperate with third-party switches that do not use the
standard 0x8100 ethertype to identify 802.1Q-tagged frames. For
example, 0x1234 is set as the custom 802.1Q ethertype on a trunk
port, incoming frames containing that ethertype are assigned to the
VLAN contained in the tag following the ethertype field, as they
would be with a standard 802.1Q trunk. Frames arriving on the port
containing any other ethertype are looked upon as untagged frames,
and assigned to the native VLAN of that port.
• All members of a VLAN should be set to the same ethertype.
Example
Related Commands
show interfaces switchport (24-16)
Console(config)#interface ethernet 1/1
Console(config-if)#switchport dot1q-ethertype 9100
Console(config-if)#
Summary of Contents for 7824M/FSW - annexe 1
Page 2: ......
Page 24: ...TABLE OF CONTENTS xxiv ...
Page 28: ...TABLES xxviii ...
Page 32: ...FIGURES xxxii Figure 16 3 DNS Cache 16 7 ...
Page 34: ...GETTING STARTED ...
Page 46: ...SYSTEM DEFAULTS 1 12 ...
Page 62: ...SWITCH MANAGEMENT ...
Page 74: ...CONFIGURING THE SWITCH 3 12 ...
Page 112: ...BASIC MANAGEMENT TASKS 4 38 ...
Page 168: ...USER AUTHENTICATION 6 30 ...
Page 223: ...SHOWING PORT STATISTICS 9 33 Figure 9 12 Port Statistics ...
Page 230: ...ADDRESS TABLE SETTINGS 10 6 ...
Page 304: ...CLASS OF SERVICE 13 16 ...
Page 316: ...QUALITY OF SERVICE 14 12 ...
Page 338: ...MULTICAST FILTERING 15 22 ...
Page 346: ...DOMAIN NAME SERVICE 16 8 ...
Page 348: ...COMMAND LINE INTERFACE IP Interface Commands 35 1 ...
Page 362: ...OVERVIEW OF COMMAND LINE INTERFACE 17 14 ...
Page 494: ...USER AUTHENTICATION COMMANDS 21 48 ...
Page 514: ...CLIENT SECURITY COMMANDS 22 20 ...
Page 540: ...ACCESS CONTROL LIST COMMANDS 23 26 ...
Page 558: ...INTERFACE COMMANDS 24 18 ...
Page 576: ...MIRROR PORT COMMANDS 26 4 ...
Page 582: ...RATE LIMIT COMMANDS 27 6 ...
Page 616: ...SPANNING TREE COMMANDS 29 28 ...
Page 644: ...VLAN COMMANDS 30 28 ...
Page 664: ...CLASS OF SERVICE COMMANDS 31 20 ...
Page 678: ...QUALITY OF SERVICE COMMANDS 32 14 ...
Page 720: ...APPENDICES ...
Page 726: ...SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS A 6 ...
Page 730: ...TROUBLESHOOTING B 4 ...
Page 746: ...INDEX Index 6 ...
Page 747: ......