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Frame Formats - Version II |
The Ethernet Version II Frame FormatThe following is a description of the frame format described by the original Ethernet Version II specification, as released by DEC, Intel, and Xerox. Like the 802.3 spec, the Version II spec defines a Data Link Header consisting of 14 bytes of information, but the Version II spec does not specify an LLC header.
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: The Ethertype An interesting question arises when one considers the 802.3 and Version II frame formats: Both formats specify a 2 byte field following the source address (an Ethertype in Version II, and a Length field in 802.3) -- How does a driver know which format it is seeing, if it is configured to support both? The answer is actually quite simple. All Ethertypes have a value greater than 05DC hex, or 1500 decimal. Since the maximum frame size in Ethernet is 1518 bytes, there is no point of overlap between Ethertypes and lengths. If the field that follows the Source Address is greater than O5DC hex, the frame is a Version II, otherwise, it is something else (either 802.3, 802.3 SNAP, or Novell Proprietary).
User Data and FCS
Data: 46-1500 Bytes
FCS: Last 4 Bytes |
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