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Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol: Revision history


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  • curprev 07:0207:02, 8 November 2021121.200.27.15 talk 15,140 bytes 0 The tunnel, at layer 2, is a tunnel through which layer 1 passes. The content of layer 1 is invisible/transparent/irrelevant to layer 2, the tunnel, and does not need to be mentioned in the layer 2 definition, except by inference: the existence of layer 2 implies the existence of layer 1 undo Tag: Reverted

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  • curprev 14:4014:40, 22 October 2020Jim Ambrose Covell talk contribsm 15,016 bytes −8 No need to even mention what data unit is at layer 2. Either way packet refers to a layer 3 data unit and a frame refers to a layer 2 data unit, so the terminology used is incorrect. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_packet undo
  • curprev 14:3414:34, 22 October 2020Jim Ambrose Covell talk contribsm 15,024 bytes 0 There is no such thing as layer 1 packets. Layer 1 refers to the physical layer of the OSI and TCP/IP models. The protocol is based on layer 2 and no where in the spec does it mention layer 1. undo

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