Why do we need multiple spanning trees, Why do we need multiple spanning trees? 84 – Blade ICE G8000 User Manual

Page 84

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RackSwitch G8000 Application Guide

84

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Chapter 5: Spanning Tree

BMD00041, November 2008

Why do we need multiple Spanning Trees?

The following examples describe why we need multiple spanning trees.

In

Figure 5-1

, VLAN 1 and VLAN 2 pass traffic between switch 1 and switch 2. If you have a

single Spanning Tree Group, the switches see an apparent physical loop, and one VLAN may
become blocked, affecting connectivity, even though no logical loop exists. VLAN 2 traffic is
blocked unnecessarily.

Figure 5-1 Two VLANs on one Spanning Tree Group

In

Figure 5-2

, VLAN 1 and VLAN 2 belong to different Spanning Tree Groups. The two

instances of Spanning Tree separate the topology without forming a loop. Both VLANs can
forward packets between the switches without losing connectivity.

Figure 5-2 Two VLANs, each on a different Spanning Tree Group

Switch 1

VLAN 1, STG 1

Switch 2

VLAN 2, STG 1

X

VLAN 2 traffic blocked by STG 1

Switch 1

VLAN 1, STG 1

Switch 2

VLAN 2, STG 2

VLAN 1 passes traffic on STG 1
VLAN 2 passes traffic on STG 2

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