HP (Hewlett-Packard) 2824 Switch User Manual


 
Port Status and Basic Configuration
Jumbo Packets on the Series 2800 Switches
Terminology
Jumbo Packet: On the Series 2800 switches, an IP packet exceeding 1522
bytes in size. The maximum Jumbo packet size is 9220 bytes. (This size
includes 4 bytes for the VLAN tag.)
Jumbo VLAN: A VLAN configured to allow inbound jumbo traffic. All ports
belonging to a jumbo and operating at 1 Gbps or higher can receive jumbo
packets from external devices.
MTU (Maximum Transmission Unit): This is the maximum-size IP packet
the switch can receive for Layer 2 packets inbound on a port. The switch
allows jumbo packets of up to 9220 bytes.
Standard MTU: On the Series 2800 switches, an IP packet of 1522 bytes in
size. (This size includes 4 bytes for the VLAN tag.)
Operating Rules
Required Port Speed: The Series 2800 switches allow inbound and
outbound jumbo packets on ports operating at speeds of 1 gigabit or
higher. At lower port speeds, only standard (1522-byte or smaller) packets
are allowed, regardless of the jumbo configuration.
Flow Control: Disable flow control (the default setting) on any ports or
trunks through which you want to transmit or receive jumbo packets.
Leaving flow control enabled on a port can cause a high rate of jumbo
drops to occur on the port.
GVRP Operation: A VLAN enabled for jumbo traffic cannot be used to
create a dynamic VLAN. A port belonging to a statically configured, jumbo-
enabled VLAN cannot join a dynamic VLAN.
Port Adds and Moves: If you add a port to a VLAN that is already
configured for jumbo traffic, the switch enables that port to receive jumbo
traffic. If you remove a port from a jumbo-enabled VLAN, the switch
disables jumbo traffic capability on the port only if the port is not currently
a member of another jumbo-enabled VLAN. This same operation applies
to port trunks.
Jumbo Traffic Sources: A port belonging to a jumbo-enabled VLAN can
receive inbound jumbo packets through any VLAN to which it belongs,
including non-jumbo VLANs. For example, if VLAN 10 (without jumbos
enabled) and VLAN 20 (with jumbos enabled) are both configured on a
switch, and port 1 belongs to both VLANs, then port 1 can receive jumbo
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