> What type of upstream device is em0 connected to? Is it a simple modem,
> (e.g. an ONT) or a router of some sort?

It turned out that the device in the other end needed to be replaced.
 
> Going a bit deeper, to explain my questions above:
> 802.1Q VLANs are basically a tag that gets attached to a packet's
> header. And it is perfectly possible for both types of packets to
> coexist in the same "wire". Some of them might be tagged, some of them
> might not.
> 
> When you create a VLAN interface with a physical interface as its parent
> (like your vlan101 on em0) you are telling the kernel "pick up all
> packets that arrive on this interface and that have this specific tag,
> and bring them to me", for incoming traffic, and "take any packet I am
> sending out of this interface and attach this VLAN tag to it".
> 
> Sidenote: this can be replicated many times, so you can have multiple
> VLANs being handled by different interfaces, with different IPs on
> different subnets, etc, all sharing the same wire, while being
> segregated (hence the name "virtual LANs").
> 
> As I said above, tagged and untagged traffic can coexist, and all
> untagged packets will still be routed through the physical interface
> (em0).
> 
> Routers and some switches can add/remove tags from packets (e.g. you can
> tell a switch to do something like "Get all vlan101 traffic from port 1,
> strip the tag, and send it out on port 8, untagged. Also, get all
> incoming untagged traffic from port 8, and tag it with vlan101", etc).
> 
> 
> Try bringing both interfaces down, remove their IP addresses (ifconfig
> em0 -inet), run:
> 
> tcpdump -ti em0 port \(66 or 67\)
> 
> on a terminal and then bring both interfaces up on a different terminal
> and see what comes up.
> 
> As I said above, tagged and untagged traffic coexist on the physical
> interface, so VLAN tagged traffic (i.e. packets that you will get on the
> vlan101 interface) will show up in lines starting with
> 
> 802.1Q vid 101 pri 1 ...
> 
> and untagged traffic (i.e. packets that will show up on em0) won't have
> that.
> 
> 
> If you are getting an IP on em0, then my guess is that one of two
> things might be happening:
> 
> - there is a DHCP server upstream that is OK with getting untagged
> traffic, and so your em0 is getting configured through it
> 
> - your upstream device is getting tagged traffic from your ISP,
> stripping its tags and sending it to em0 untagged (and the other way
> round, for your outgoing traffic).

Thank you very very much for this detailed and very useful explanation!

Reply via email to