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layer(s) are used by Copperlan?

PostPosted: 21 Sep 2015, 17:48
by steeley
So from what I can tell Copperlan uses its own protocol(?)
What layer(s) does it use on ethernet?
Does it use port numbers at all?

IT dept. need to know this before its let loose on our network...

TIA

Re: layer(s) are used by Copperlan?

PostPosted: 21 Sep 2015, 18:03
by Copperhead
CopperLan has its own Ethertype IEEE 0x8927. There is no way it can interfere with IP protocols, ports or anything IP related.

Re: layer(s) are used by Copperlan?

PostPosted: 21 Sep 2015, 20:07
by steeley
ok thx. for the info.

I guess that means it can't be segmented or kept on a subnet then.?

Re: layer(s) are used by Copperlan?

PostPosted: 22 Sep 2015, 11:33
by CopperNet
Hello steely,

The CopperLan protocol is an Ethernet Layer 2 protocol.

it means that by design CopperLan remains on a subnet. Without further configuration of the boundary ip equipments (router, firewall, ...), CopperLan cannot go beyond the subnet.

Hope it helps

Re: layer(s) are used by Copperlan?

PostPosted: 22 Sep 2015, 18:19
by steeley
ok thanks - if it can stay within a single subnet that should be ok.