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Frame Formats - Novell Proprietary |
The Novell Proprietary Frame FormatNovell's Proprietary Frame Format was developed based on a preliminary release of the 802.3 specification. After Novell released their proprietary format, the LLC Header was added, making Novell's format incompatible.
The Data Link Header
Offset 0-5: The Destination Address The first three bytes of the Destination Address are assigned by the IEEE to the vendor of the adapter, and are specific to the vendor. The Destination Address format is identical in all implementations of Ethernet.
Offset 6-11: The Source Address The Source Address format is identical in all implementations of Ethernet.
Offset 12-13: Length
User Data and the Frame Check Sequence (FCS)
Data: 46-1497 Bytes
FCS: Last 4 Bytes
A Final Note on the Novell Ethernet Frame Format"A Novell client can only use one frame format for NetWare" This is a true statement that needs some clarification to be fully understood. It should be noted that Novell workstations are capable of using any of the four Ethernet frame types mentioned in this essay, based on the LOAD and BIND settings in the NET.CFG file. A Novell client will use the list of frame formats in NET.CFG to attempt to locate a file server (or a Netware Directory Server for the VLM shell). The client starts at the top of the list of frame types in NET.CFG and broadcasts a 'Find Nearest Server' message. If no file server answers (or Directory Services server in a VLM client) then the client tries the next frame format. When a server finally does answer then the client will use the successful frame format from then on; until the client is rebooted.
As a result, you should remember that a Novell client will ultimately use only one of the four frame formats; it can not actually use multiple formats for
NetWare at the same time. The format it selects will be based on its initial attempt to locate a server. This behavior is restricted to the frame format used
by NCP and SPX - if the client is also running a TCP/IP stack then the IP protocol can be configured to use any other frame format (typically Version II
Ethernet). |
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