Reference Guide

VLAN Stacking in Multi-Vendor Networks
The first field in the VLAN tag is the tag protocol identifier (TPID), which is 2 bytes. In a VLAN-stacking network, after the
frame is double tagged, the outer tag TPID must match the TPID of the next-hop system.
While 802.1Q requires that the inner tag TPID is 0x8100, it does not require a specific value for the outer tag TPID.
Systems may use any 2-byte value; FTOS uses 0x9100 (shown in the following) while non-Dell Networking systems might
use a different value.
If the next-hop system’s TPID does not match the outer-tag TPID of the incoming frame, the system drops the frame. For
example, as shown in the following, the frame originating from Building A is tagged VLAN RED, and then double-tagged
VLAN PURPLE on egress at R4. The TPID on the outer tag is 0x9100. R2’s TPID must also be 0x9100, and it is, so R2
forwards the frame.
Given the matching-TPID requirement, there are limitations when you employ Dell Networking systems at network
edges, at which, frames are either double tagged on ingress (R4) or the outer tag is removed on egress (R3).
VLAN Stacking
The default TPID for the outer VLAN tag is 0x9100. Beginning with FTOS version 8.2.1.0, the system allows you to
configure both bytes of the 2 byte TPID.
Previous versions allowed you to configure the first byte only, and thus, the systems did not differentiate between TPIDs
with a common first byte. For example, 0x8100 and any other TPID beginning with 0x81 were treated as the same TPID,
as shown in the following illustration. FTOS Versions 8.2.1.0 and later differentiate between 0x9100 and 0x91XY, also
shown in the following illustration.
You can configure the first 8 bits of the TPID using the vlan-stack protocol-type command.
The TPID is global. Ingress frames that do not match the system TPID are treated as untagged. This rule applies for both
the outer tag TPID of a double-tagged frame and the TPID of a single-tagged frame.
For example, if you configure TPID 0x9100, the system treats 0x8100 and untagged traffic the same and maps both types
to the default VLAN, as shown by the frame originating from Building C. For the same traffic types, if you configure TPID
0x8100, the system is able to differentiate between 0x8100 and untagged traffic and maps each to the appropriate VLAN,
as shown by the packet originating from Building A.
Therefore, a mismatched TPID results in the port not differentiating between tagged and untagged traffic.
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