Jumbo frames have the potential to reduce overheads and CPU cycles and have a positive effect on end-to-end TCP performance. The presence of jumbo frames may have an adverse effect on network latency, especially on low-bandwidth links. The frame size used by an end-to-end connection is typically limited by the lowest frame size in intermediate links.
802.5 Token Ring can support frames with a 4464-byte
MTU,
FDDI can transport 4352-byte,
ATM 9180-byte and
802.11 can transport 7935-byte MTUs. The
IEEE 802.3 Ethernet standard originally mandated support for 1500-byte MTU frames, 1518 byte total frame size (1522 byte with the optional
IEEE 802.1Q VLAN/
QoS tag). The IEEE 802.3as update grandfathered in multiple common headers, trailers, and encapsulations by creating the concept of an envelope where up to 482 bytes of header and trailer could be included, and the largest IEEE 802.3 supported Ethernet frame became 2000 bytes. The use of 9000 bytes as preferred payload size for jumbo frames arose from discussions within the Joint Engineering Team of
Internet2 and the U.S. federal government networks. Their recommendation has been adopted by all other national research and education networks. Manufacturers have in turn adopted 9000 bytes as the conventional MTU size, with a total jumbo frame size of between 9014 and 9022 bytes with Ethernet headers included. Most Ethernet equipment can support jumbo frames up to 9216 bytes.
IEEE 802.1AB-2009 and
IEEE 802.3bc-2009 added
LLDP discovery to standard Ethernet for maximum frame length (
TLV subtype 4). It allows frame length detection on a port by a two-octet field. As of IEEE 802.3-2015, allowed values are
1518 (only basic frames),
1522 (802.1Q-tagged frames), and
2000 (multi-tagged, envelope frames). ==Error detection==