The Amazing Unmanaged Trunk Mode Switch

Have you ever needed to set up a bunch of equipment on a boardroom table or some other temporary location, and needed both native and 802.1q tagged VLANs, but only had one available switchport?

A quick n’ dirty solution is to use an unmanaged switch, such as one of the numerous 8-port desktop switches from manufacturers such as D-Link, Netgear, Linksys etc. Configure its upstream switchport as a trunk port, thus allowing your required VLANs to pass tagged frames to your unmanaged desktop switch.

Wait a second, you say…. unmanaged switches can’t do trunk ports. How can an unmanaged switch understand VLAN frames?

It doesn’t need to. What is an 802.1q tagged frame, other than a standard 802.3 ethernet frame with four additional bytes inserted? These four additional bytes are the 802.1q VLAN ID field and 802.1p CoS field. As long as the unmanaged switch does not truncate frames to the 802.3 standard 1518 bytes, it will happily forward the 1522-byte 802.1q tagged frames just like any other. The last time I encountered a switch that would not forward these slightly “oversized” frames, was about four years ago… and it was a very cheap and nasty brand (name withheld to protect the innocent guilty).

This trick also comes in handy when you have a user with a two-port VoIP phone (such as most Cisco, Snom, Polycom etc phones), using a voice-VLAN, and the user requires more switchports than are currently available at his/her desk. Simply connect the 8-port unmanaged switch before the IP phone (ie. to the upstream port), and connect the IP phone to the unmanaged switch. The phone still gets its tagged voice-VLAN frames, the PC gets its untagged data-VLAN frames (tag-stripped if necessary by the IP phone), and the user has 6 other ports available to connect whatever… including, if necessary, other VLANs (so long as they’re tagged, and the end device can work with tagged frames, since the unmanaged switch won’t strip the 802.1q tag).

Beware though, this should only ever be used as a temporary measure, since it does open a few security holes. If the “allowed VLANs” is not carefully configured on the upstream port, the opportunity exists to VLAN-hop, or flood traffic into other VLANs. And of course, since the unmanaged switch is, well, unmanaged, there is no individual “allowed VLANs” security on those 8 ports. All ports are effectively the same as that one upstream trunk port.

Have you used this method before? What brand/model unmanaged switch did you use? What were your experiences with it, and did you encounter any problems?


Posted

in

,

by

Tags:

Comments

One response to “The Amazing Unmanaged Trunk Mode Switch”

  1. ngara Avatar
    ngara

    Thank you for this post. I was trying to figure out whether an unmanaged switch would forward VLAN tags to a managed switch, because I need an Ethernet repeater that handles them. This article seemed to answer my question in the affirmative, so I’m going to go test it out. Keep up the posts!

Leave a Reply