Migrating Layer 3 VLANs using VLAN MAC configuration

HP switches provide for maintaining Layer 3 VLAN configurations when migrating distribution routers in networks not centrally managed, by configuring the MAC address of the previous router on the VLAN interfaces of the HP routing switch.

VLAN MAC address reconfiguration

HP switches use one unique MAC address for all VLAN interfaces. If you assign an IP address to a VLAN interface, ARP resolves the IP address to the MAC address of the routing switch for all incoming packets.

The Layer 3 VLAN MAC Configuration feature lets you reconfigure the MAC address used for VLAN interfaces, using the CLI. Packets addressed to the reconfigured Layer 3 MAC address, such as ARP and IP data packets, are received and processed by the HP routing switch.

Packets transmitted from the routing switch (packets originating from the router and forwarded packets) use the original HP Switch MAC address as the source MAC address in Ethernet headers.

ARP reply packets use the reconfigured MAC address in both the:

  • ARP Sender MAC address field

  • Source MAC address field in the Ethernet frame header

When reconfiguring the MAC address, you may specify a keepalive timeout to transmit heartbeat packets that advertise the new MAC address

By configuring the MAC address of the previously installed router as the MAC address of each VLAN interface on an HP Switch, you can swap the physical port of a router to the HP Switch after the switch has been properly configured in the network.

Handling incoming and outgoing VLAN Traffic

Incoming VLAN data packets and ARP requests

These are received and processed on the routing switch according to the MAC address of the previously installed router configured for each VLAN interface.

Outgoing VLAN traffic

This uses the MAC address of the HP Sswitch as the source MAC address in packet headers. The MAC address configured on VLAN interfaces is not used on outbound VLAN traffic.

When the routing switch receives an ARP request for the IP address configured on a VLAN interface, the ARP reply uses the reconfigured MAC address in both the:

  • ARP Sender MAC address field

  • Source MAC address field in the Ethernet frame header

When proxy ARP is enabled on a VLAN interface, the "gracious" ARP reply sent for an ARP request received from VLAN devices located outside the directly connected IP subnets also contains the reconfigured MAC address in both the:

  • ARP Sender MAC address field

  • Source MAC address field in the Ethernet frame header

To hosts in the network, VLAN traffic continues to be routed (using the reconfigured MAC address as destination address), but outbound VLAN traffic appears to be sent from another router attached to the same subnet (using the HP Switch MAC address as source address) attached to the same subnet . Although it appears as an asymmetric path to network hosts, the MAC address configuration feature enables Layer 3 VLAN migration. (A successful VLAN migration is achieved because the hosts do not verify that the source MAC address and the destination MAC address are the same when communicating with the routing switch.)

Sending heartbeat packets with a configured MAC Address

On the VLAN interfaces of a routing switch, the user-defined MAC address only applies to inbound traffic. As a result, any connected switches need to learn the new address that is included in the Ethernet frames of outbound VLAN traffic transmitted from the routing switch.

If a connected switch does not have the newly configured MAC address of the routing switch as a destination in its MAC address table, it floods packets to all of its ports until a return stream allows the switch to learn the correct destination address. As a result, the performance of the switch is degraded as it tries to send Ethernet packets to an unknown destination address.

To allow connected switches to learn the user-configured MAC address of a VLAN interface, the HP routing switch can send periodic heartbeat-like Ethernet packets. The Ethernet packets contain the configured MAC address as the source address in the packet header. IP multicast packets or Ethernet service frames are preferred because they do not interrupt the normal operation of client devices connected on the segment.

Because the aging time of destination addresses in MAC address tables varies on network devices, you must also configure a time interval to use for sending heartbeat packets.

Heartbeat packets are sent at periodic intervals with a specific HP Switch unicast MAC address in the destination field. This MAC address is assigned to the HP Switch and is not used by other non-HP routers. Because the heartbeat packet contains a unicast MAC address, it does not interrupt host operation. Even if you have multiple 1-65 Static Virtual LANs (VLANs) Introducing tagged VLAN technology into networks running untagged VLANs HP switches connected to the network, there is no impact on network performance because each switch sends heartbeat packets with its configured MAC address as the destination address.

The format of a heartbeat packet is an extended Ethernet OUI frame with an extended OUI Ethertype (88B7) and a new protocol identifier in the 5-octet protocol identifier field.

Displaying a VLAN MAC address configuration (CLI)

Syntax:

show ip-recv-mac-address

Displaying a VLAN MAC address

HP Switch#: show ip-recv-mac-address

VLAN L3-Mac-Address Table

VLAN                           L3-Mac-Address                Timeout
-------------                  ------------------------      -----------
DEFAULT_VLAN                  001635-024467                  60
VLAN2                         001635-437529                  100