Tunnel origination, Building the spanning tree – Intermec 6710 User Manual

Page 231

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APPENDIX E

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OWL/IP

6710 Access Point User’s Guide E-9

Following are three primary differences between secondary

LANs separated by wireless links and secondary LANs

separated by OWL/IP tunnels:

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Any access point on the distribution LAN can provide

wireless connectivity for a designated bridge on a

secondary Ethernet LAN. Only the super root can

originate OWL/IP connections to designated bridges

on remote subnets.

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Flooding parameters for designated bridges on

secondary Ethernet LANs can be adjusted through the

global settings in the super root, or through local

configuration in the designated bridge. Flooding

parameters for OWL/IP tunnels are not adjustable.

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The super root and designated bridges for OWL/IP

tunnels include additional configurable output

(transmit) filters, allowing frame types forwarded

through tunnels to be tightly controlled. These filters

are provided in addition to the standard Ethernet

input filters available in all access points.

Tunnel Origination

Building the Spanning Tree

The open wireless LAN spanning tree is established and

maintained by short hello messages originating at the super

root. “Hellos” are broadcast periodically at intervals of a

few seconds. These frames contain network coordination

information, including root priority.
At power up, all super root candidates listen for hello

messages. If they do not detect hellos, or detect hellos from

a lower priority root candidate, they begin to send hello

messages.

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