Bridge priority and the root bridge, Table 14: bridge priority value increments – Allied Telesis AT-S63 User Manual

Page 216

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Chapter 20: Spanning Tree and Rapid Spanning Tree Protocols

216

Section V: Spanning Tree Protocols

Bridge Priority and the Root Bridge

The first task that bridges perform when a spanning tree protocol is
activated on a network is the selection of a root bridge. A root bridge
distributes network topology information to the other network bridges and
is used by the other bridges to determine if there are redundant paths in
the network.

A root bridge is selected by the bridge priority number, also referred to as
the bridge identifier, and sometimes the bridge’s MAC address. The bridge
with the lowest bridge priority number in the network is selected as the
root bridge. If two or more bridges have the same bridge priority number,
of those bridges the one with the lowest MAC address is designated as
the root bridge.

You can change the bridge priority number in the AT-S63 Management
Software. You can designate which switch on your network you want as
the root bridge by giving it the lowest bridge priority number. You might
also consider which bridge should function as the backup root bridge in
the event you need to take the primary root bridge offline, and assign that
bridge the second lowest bridge identifier number.

The bridge priority has a range 0 to 61440 in increments of 4096. To make
this easier for you, the AT-S63 Management Software divides the range
into increments. You specify the increment that represents the desired
bridge priority value. The range is divided into sixteen increments, as
shown in Table 14.

Table 14. Bridge Priority Value Increments

Increment

Bridge

Priority

Increment

Bridge

Priority

0

0

8

32768

1

4096

9

36864

2

8192

10

40960

3

12288

11

45056

4

16384

12

49152

5

20480

13

53248

6

24576

14

57344

7

28672

15

61440

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