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VLAN(4)			 BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual		       VLAN(4)

NAME
     vlan -- IEEE 802.1Q VLAN network interface

SYNOPSIS
     To	compile	this driver into the kernel, place the following line in your
     kernel configuration file:

	   device vlan

     Alternatively, to load the	driver as a module at boot time, place the
     following line in loader.conf(5):

	   if_vlan_load="YES"

DESCRIPTION
     The vlan driver demultiplexes frames tagged according to the IEEE 802.1Q
     standard into logical vlan	network	interfaces, which allows rout-
     ing/bridging between multiple VLANs through a single switch trunk port.

     Each vlan interface is created at runtime using interface cloning.	 This
     is	most easily done with the ifconfig(8) create command or	using the
     cloned_interfaces variable	in rc.conf(5).

     To	function, a vlan interface must	be assigned a parent interface and nu-
     meric VLAN	tag using ifconfig(8).	A single parent	can be assigned	to
     multiple vlan interfaces provided they have different tags.  The parent
     interface is likely to be an Ethernet card	connected to a properly	con-
     figured switch port.  The VLAN tag	should match one of those set up in
     the switched network.

     vlan initially assumes the	same minimum length for	tagged and untagged
     frames.  This mode	is selected by setting the sysctl(8) variable
     net.link.vlan.soft_pad to 0 (default).  However, there are	network	de-
     vices that	fail to	adjust frame length when it falls below	the allowed
     minimum due to untagging.	Such devices should be able to interoperate
     with vlan after changing the value	of net.link.vlan.soft_pad to 1.	 In
     the latter	mode, vlan will	pad short frames before	tagging	them so	that
     their length is not less than the minimum value after untagging by	the
     non-compliant devices.

HARDWARE
     The vlan driver supports efficient	operation over parent interfaces that
     can provide help in processing VLANs.  Such interfaces are	automatically
     recognized	by their capabilities.	Depending on the level of sophistica-
     tion found	in a physical interface, it may	do full	VLAN processing	or
     just be able to receive and transmit long frames (up to 1522 bytes	in-
     cluding an	Ethernet header	and FCS).  The capabilities may	be user-con-
     trolled by	the respective parameters to ifconfig(8), vlanhwtag, and
     vlanmtu.  However,	a physical interface is	not obliged to react to	them:
     It	may have either	capability enabled permanently without a way to	turn
     it	off.  The whole	issue is very specific to a particular device and its
     driver.

     At	present, these devices are capable of full VLAN	processing in hard-
     ware: ae(4), age(4), alc(4), ale(4), bce(4), bge(4), cxgb(4), cxgbe(4),
     em(4), igb(4), ixgb(4), ixgbe(4), jme(4), msk(4), mxge(4),	nxge(4),
     nge(4), re(4), sge(4), stge(4), ti(4), txp(4), and	vge(4).

     Other Ethernet interfaces can run VLANs using software emulation in the
     vlan driver.  However, some lack the capability of	transmitting and re-
     ceiving long frames.  Assigning such an interface as the parent to	vlan
     will result in a reduced MTU on the corresponding vlan interfaces.	 In
     the modern	Internet, this is likely to cause tcp(4) connectivity problems
     due to massive, inadequate	icmp(4)	filtering that breaks the Path MTU
     Discovery mechanism.

     These interfaces natively support long frames for vlan: axe(4), bfe(4),
     cas(4), dc(4), et(4), fwe(4), fxp(4), gem(4), hme(4), le(4), nfe(4),
     nve(4), rl(4), sf(4), sis(4), sk(4), ste(4), tl(4), tx(4),	vr(4), vte(4),
     and xl(4).

     The vlan driver automatically recognizes devices that natively support
     long frames for vlan use and calculates the appropriate frame MTU based
     on	the capabilities of the	parent interface.  Some	other interfaces not
     listed above may handle long frames, but they do not advertise this abil-
     ity.  The MTU setting on vlan can be corrected manually if	used in	con-
     junction with such	a parent interface.

SEE ALSO
     ifconfig(8), sysctl(8)

BUGS
     No	802.1Q features	except VLAN tagging are	implemented.

BSD				 June 4, 2012				   BSD

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | HARDWARE | SEE ALSO | BUGS

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