Nortel 450-24t 用户指南

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页码 400
Using the BayStack 450 10/100/1000 Series Switch
1-52
309978-D Rev 01
IEEE 802.1Q Tagging
BayStack 450 switches operate in accordance with the IEEE 802.1Q tagging 
rules. Important terms used with the 802.1Q tagging feature are:
VLAN identifier (VID) --  the 12-bit portion of the VLAN tag in the frame 
header that identifies an explicit VLAN.
Port VLAN identifier (PVID) --  a classification mechanism that associates a 
port with a specific VLAN (see Figures 1-24 to 1-29).
Tagged frame -- the 32-bit field (VLAN tag) in the frame header that identifies 
the frame as belonging to a specific VLAN. Untagged frames are marked 
(tagged) with this classification as they leave the switch through a port that is 
configured as a tagged port.
Untagged frame --  a frame that does not carry any VLAN tagging 
information in the frame header.
VLAN port members -- a set of ports that form a broadcast domain for a 
specific VLAN. A port can be a member of one or more VLANs.
Untagged member -- a port that has been configured as an untagged member 
of a specific VLAN. When an untagged frame exits the switch through an 
untagged member port, the frame header remains unchanged. When a tagged 
frame exits the switch through an untagged member port, the tag is stripped 
and the tagged frame is changed to an untagged frame.
Tagged member -- a port that has been configured as a member of a specific 
VLAN. When an untagged frame exits the switch through a tagged member 
port, the frame header is modified to include the 32-bit tag associated with the 
VLAN assigned to that frame. When a tagged frame exits the switch through a 
tagged member port, the frame header remains unchanged (original VID 
remains).
User_priority -- a three-bit field in the header of a tagged frame. The field is 
interpreted as a binary number, and therefore has a value of 0 through 7. This 
field allows the tagged frame to carry the user_priority value across bridged 
LANs where the individual LAN segments may be unable to signal priority 
information.
Port priority -- the priority level assigned to untagged frames received on a 
port. This value becomes the frame’s user_priority value. Tagged packets get 
their user_priority value from the 802.1Q frame header.