RFC 2641 (rfc2641) - Page 2 of 17
Cabletron's VlanHello Protocol Specification Version 4
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 2641 Cabletron's VlanHello Protocol Version 4 August 1999
1. Introduction
This memo is being distributed to members of the Internet community
in order to solicit reactions to the proposals contained herein.
While the specification discussed here may not be directly relevant
to the research problems of the Internet, it may be of interest to
researchers and implementers.
1.1 Data Conventions
The methods used in this memo to describe and picture data adhere to
the standards of Internet Protocol documentation [RFC 1700], in
particular:
The convention in the documentation of Internet Protocols is to
express numbers in decimal and to picture data in "big-endian"
order. That is, fields are described left to right, with the most
significant octet on the left and the least significant octet on
the right.
The order of transmission of the header and data described in this
document is resolved to the octet level. Whenever a diagram shows
a group of octets, the order of transmission of those octets is
the normal order in which they are read in English.
Whenever an octet represents a numeric quantity the left most bit
in the diagram is the high order or most significant bit. That
is, the bit labeled 0 is the most significant bit.
Similarly, whenever a multi-octet field represents a numeric
quantity the left most bit of the whole field is the most
significant bit. When a multi-octet quantity is transmitted the
most significant octet is transmitted first.
2. VlanHello Protocol Operational Overview
Switches use the VlanHello protocol to detect their neighboring
switches and establish the topology of the switch fabric.
2.1 Neighbor Discovery
At initialization, each switch sends an Interswitch Keepalive message
out all local ports except those which have been preconfigured such
that they cannot be Network ports (see Section 2.2). Then, as each
switch discovers its neighboring switches via incoming Interswitch
Keepalive messages, it notifies its local topology services (see
Section 2.3), which then build the topology tables for the switching
fabric.
Hamilton & Ruffen Informational