Configuration through LLDP

Last Updated : Apr 17, 2026 |
Prolog information
Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) is an open standards, layer 2 protocol that IP phones use to advertise their identity and capabilities and to receive administration from Ethernet switches. LAN equipment can use LLDP to manage power and administer VLANs, DSCP, and 802.1p priority fields.
The transmission and reception of LLDP is specified in IEEE 802.1AB-2005. The 9600 Series IP Deskphones Avaya J100 Series IP Phones use Type-Length-Value (TLV) elements specified in IEEE 802.1AB-2005, TIA TR-41 Committee - Media Endpoint Discovery (LLDP-MED, ANSI/TIA-1057), and Proprietary elements. LLDP Data Units (LLDPDUs) are sent to the LLDP Multicast MAC address.
The 9600 Series IP Deskphones Avaya J100 Series IP Phones running SIP software support IEEE 802.1AB if the value of the configuration parameter LLDP_ENABLED is 1 (On) or 2 (Auto). If the value of LLDP_ENABLED is 0 (off), the transmission and reception of Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) is not supported. When the value of LLDP_ENABLED is 2, the transmission of LLDP frames does not begin until an LLDP frame is received. The first LLDP frame is transmitted within 2 seconds after the first LLDP frame is received. After transmission begins, an LLDPDU is transmitted every 30 seconds. A delay of up to 30 seconds in phone initialization might occur if the file server address is delivered by LLDP and not by DHCP.
These phones do not transmit 802.1AB multicast LLDP packets from an Ethernet line interface to the secondary line interface and vice versa.
By using LLDP, you can configure the following:
  • Call server IP address
  • File server
  • PHY2VLAN
  • L2QVLAN and L2Q
  • DSCP
  • 802.1p priority