Bridge id, switch priority, and extended system id, Figure 18-1 – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 462

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18-4

Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Software Configuration Guide

OL-13270-03

Chapter 18 Configuring STP

Understanding Spanning-Tree Features

Only one outgoing port on the stack root switch is selected as the root port. The remaining switches
in the stack become its designated switches (Switch 2 and Switch 3) as shown in

Figure 18-1

.

The shortest distance to the root switch is calculated for each switch based on the path cost.

A designated switch for each LAN segment is selected. The designated switch incurs the lowest path
cost when forwarding packets from that LAN to the root switch. The port through which the
designated switch is attached to the LAN is called the designated port.

Figure 18-1

Spanning-Tree Port States in a Switch Stack

All paths that are not needed to reach the root switch from anywhere in the switched network are placed
in the spanning-tree blocking mode.

Bridge ID, Switch Priority, and Extended System ID

The IEEE 802.1D standard requires that each switch has an unique bridge identifier (bridge ID), which
controls the selection of the root switch. Because each VLAN is considered as a different logical bridge
with PVST+ and rapid PVST+, the same switch must have a different bridge IDs for each configured
VLAN. Each VLAN on the switch has a unique 8-byte bridge ID. The 2 most-significant bytes are used
for the switch priority, and the remaining 6 bytes are derived from the switch MAC address.

Switch 1

Blade switch stack

Outgoing RP

Switch 2

StackWise Plus

port

connections

BP

DP

Switch 3

Switch A

Switch B

DP

Spanning-tree root

RP

DP

RP = root port
DP = designated port
BP = blocked port

201768

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