m1ldslide1
Platinum Member
The question: When are jumbo frames actually used?
I've never actually seen a jumbo frame register on an interface counter. I understand that support for jumbo frames has been written into the gigabit ethernet standard, but it's my understanding that they're only actually used in very specific applications. I here the term thrown around on these forums quite a bit and it seems like people think that their consumer-class switch is somehow reencapsulating their ethernet frames to combine them into these 9kB frames. I've even heard some poor souls suggesting "You can't get to gigabit speeds without jumbo frames!" which is a pretty fundamental misunderstanding of networking architecture, so those folks need not respond to this post.
From Cisco press:
"Jumbo frames- Many high data-transfer applications, such as network attached storage (NAS - not to be confused with network access server) support jumbo frames, which extend the MTU for ethernet frames from 1518Bytes up to 9216Bytes. Using jumbo frames improves data throughput for data-intensive applications such as network-attached storage."
So in other words, if you're not using an application that specifically encapsulates frames as jumbo, then you're never ever going to see a jumbo frame on your home or enterprise network. After all, TCP is only going to window up to 1518 bytes in a network with no congestion, and is usually less than that. NAS is new to me - the only time I ever heard of jumbo frames being used is with Fibre-channel networks, in other words, Storage Area Networks. I can verify that one of the networks I maintain is a very large metro-ring with over 250 individual sites and gigabit connectivity between them. There has never been a jumbo frame recorded on any gigabit interface, and these are enterprise class cisco switches that definately support jumbo frames.
It's not a huge deal overall, but I cringe every time I see someone talking about jumbo frames in their home network, or even worse making a purchase recommendation based on jumbo frame support.
Anybody have any input or quotes to add???
I've never actually seen a jumbo frame register on an interface counter. I understand that support for jumbo frames has been written into the gigabit ethernet standard, but it's my understanding that they're only actually used in very specific applications. I here the term thrown around on these forums quite a bit and it seems like people think that their consumer-class switch is somehow reencapsulating their ethernet frames to combine them into these 9kB frames. I've even heard some poor souls suggesting "You can't get to gigabit speeds without jumbo frames!" which is a pretty fundamental misunderstanding of networking architecture, so those folks need not respond to this post.
From Cisco press:
"Jumbo frames- Many high data-transfer applications, such as network attached storage (NAS - not to be confused with network access server) support jumbo frames, which extend the MTU for ethernet frames from 1518Bytes up to 9216Bytes. Using jumbo frames improves data throughput for data-intensive applications such as network-attached storage."
So in other words, if you're not using an application that specifically encapsulates frames as jumbo, then you're never ever going to see a jumbo frame on your home or enterprise network. After all, TCP is only going to window up to 1518 bytes in a network with no congestion, and is usually less than that. NAS is new to me - the only time I ever heard of jumbo frames being used is with Fibre-channel networks, in other words, Storage Area Networks. I can verify that one of the networks I maintain is a very large metro-ring with over 250 individual sites and gigabit connectivity between them. There has never been a jumbo frame recorded on any gigabit interface, and these are enterprise class cisco switches that definately support jumbo frames.
It's not a huge deal overall, but I cringe every time I see someone talking about jumbo frames in their home network, or even worse making a purchase recommendation based on jumbo frame support.
Anybody have any input or quotes to add???