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Terminology and Acronyms
Networking with
a switch over Ethernet on a LAN is different than networking with
a router with IP over a wider area. Even the words used to talk about
Ethernet networking are different from those used in IP routing. This
section provides a list of all the terms and acronyms used in this
manual, as well terms that apply to a complete network using Ethernet
as a carrier technology.
- 802.1ad—The IEEE specification for
“Q-in-Q” encapsulation and bridging of Ethernet frames.
- 802.1ah—The IEEE specification for
media access control (MAC) tunneling encapsulation and bridging of
Ethernet frames across a provided backbone-managed bridge.
- 802.3ah—The IEEE specification for
link fault management (LFM), a method for Operations, Administration,
and Maintenance (OAM) of Ethernet links.
- 802.1Q—The IEEE specification for adding
virtual local area network (VLAN) tags to an Ethernet frame.
- B–MAC—The backbone source and
destination MAC address fields found in the IEEE 802.1ah provider
MAC encapsulation header.
- Bridge—A network component defined
by the IEEE that forwards frames from one LAN segment or VLAN to another.
The bridging function can be contained in a router, LAN switch, or
other specialized device. See also switch.
- Bridge domain—A set of logical ports
that share the same flooding or broadcast characteristics. As in a
virtual LAN, a bridge domain spans one or more ports of multiple devices.
By default, each bridge domain maintains its own forwarding database
of MAC addresses learned from packets received on ports belonging
to that bridge domain. See also broadcast domain and VLAN.
- B-TAG—A field defined in the IEEE 802.1ah
provider MAC encapsulation header that carries the backbone VLAN identifier
information. The format of the B-TAG field is the same as that of
the IEEE 802.1ad S-TAG field. See also S-TAG.
- B-VID—The specific VLAN identifier
carried in a B-TAG.
- CIST—Common and Internal Spanning Tree. The single
spanning tree calculated by the spanning tree protocol (STP) and the
rapid spanning tree protocol (RSTP) and the logical continuation of
that connectivity through multiple spanning tree (MST) bridges and
regions, calculated to ensure that all LANs in the bridged LAN are
simply and fully connected. See also MSTI.
- Ethernet—A term loosely applied to
a family of LAN standards based on the original proprietary Ethernet
from DEC, Intel, and Xerox (DIX Ethernet), and the open specifications
developed by the IEEE 802.3 committee (IEEE 802.3 LANs). In practice,
few LANs comply completely with DIX Ethernet or IEEE 802.3.
- IRB—Integrated bridging and routing. IRB provides
simultaneous support for Layer 2 (L2) bridging and Layer 3 (L3) routing
within the same bridge domain. Packets arriving on an interface of
the bridge domain are L2 switched or L3 routed based on the destination
MAC address. Packets addressed to the router's MAC address are routed
to other L3 interfaces.
- I-SID—The 24–bit service instance
identifier field carried inside an I-TAG. The I-SID defines the service
instance to which the frame is mapped.
- I-TAG—A field defined in the IEEE 802.1ah
provider MAC encapsulation header that carries the service instance
information (I-SID) associated with the frame.
- Learning domain—A MAC address database where the
MAC addresses are added based on the normalized VLAN tags.
- LFM—Link fault management. A method
used to detect problems on links and spans on an Ethernet network
defined in IEEE 802.3ah. See also OAM.
- MSTI—Multiple Spanning Tree Instance. One of a number
of spanning trees calculated by MSTP within an MST region. The MSTI
provides a simple and fully connected active topology for frames classified
as belonging to a VLAN that is mapped to the MSTI by the MST configuration
table used by the MST bridges of that MST region. See also CIST.
- MSTP—Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol. A spanning-tree
protocol used to prevent loops in bridge configurations. Unlike other
types of STPs, MSTP can block ports selectively by VLAN. See also RSTP.
- OAM—Operation, Administration, and
Maintenance. A set of tools used to provide management for links,
device, and networks. See also LFM.
- PBB—Provider backbone bridge.
- PBBN—Provider backbone bridged network.
- Q-in-Q—See 802.1ad.
- RSTP—Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol. A spanning-tree
protocol used to prevent loops in bridge configurations. RSTP is not
aware of VLANs and blocks ports at the physical level. See also MSTP.
- S-TAG—A field defined in the IEEE 802.1ad
Q-in-Q encapsulation header that carries the S-VLAN identifier information.
See also B-TAG.
- S-tagged service interface—The interface
between a customer edge (CE) device and the I-BEB or IB-BEB network
components. Frames passed through this interface contain an S-TAG
field. See also B-tagged service interface.
- S-VLAN—The specific service instance
VLAN identifier carried inside the S-TAG field. See also B-VID.
- Switch—A network device that attempts
to perform as much of the forwarding task in hardware as possible.
The switch can function as a bridge (LAN switch), router, or some
other specialized device, and forwards frames, packets, or other data
units. See also bridge.
- Virtual switch—A routing instance that can contain
one or more bridge domains.
- VLAN—Defines a broadcast domain, a set of logical
ports that share the same flooding or broadcast characteristics. VLANs
span one or more ports on multiple devices. By default, each VLAN
maintains its own Layer 2 forwarding database containing MAC addresses
learned from packets received on ports belonging to the VLAN. See
also bridge domain.
At this point, these acronyms and terms are just a bewildering
array of letters and words. It is the goal of this manual to make
the contents of this list familiar and allow you to place each of
them in context and understand how they relate to each other. To do
that, a basic understanding of modern Ethernet standards and technology
is necessary.
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