Configuring Qinq; Overview; Background And Benefits; How Qinq Works - HP 3100 Series Configuration Manual

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Configuring QinQ

Throughout this document, customer network VLANs (CVLANs), also called inner VLANs, refer to
the VLANs that a customer uses on the private network; and service provider network VLANs
(SVLANs), also called outer VLANs, refer to the VLANs that a service provider uses to carry VLAN
tagged traffic for customers.

Overview

802.1Q-in-802.1Q (QinQ) is a flexible, easy-to-implement Layer 2 VPN technology based on IEEE
802.1Q. QinQ enables the edge device on a service provider network to insert an outer VLAN tag in
the Ethernet frames from customer networks, so that the Ethernet frames travel across the service
provider network (public network) with double VLAN tags. QinQ enables a service provider to use a
single SVLAN to serve customers who have multiple CVLANs.

Background and benefits

The IEEE 802.1Q VLAN tag uses 12 bits for VLAN IDs. A device supports a maximum of 4094
VLANs. This is far from enough for isolating users in actual networks, especially in metropolitan area
networks (MANs).
By tagging tagged frames, QinQ expands the available VLAN space from 4094 to 4094 × 4094.
QinQ delivers the following benefits:
Releases the stress on the SVLAN resource.
Enables customers to plan their CVLANs without conflicting with SVLANs.
Provides an easy-to-implement Layer 2 VPN solution for small-sized MANs or intranets.
Enables the customers to keep their VLAN assignment schemes unchanged when the service
provider upgrades the service provider network.

How QinQ works

The devices in the public network forward a frame only according to its outer VLAN tag and obtain its
source MAC address into the MAC address table of the outer VLAN. The inner VLAN tag of the
frame is transmitted as the payload.
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