H3C Technologies H3C S7500E Series Switches User Manual

Page 157

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13-5

Selection of the root bridge

Initially, each STP-enabled device on the network assumes itself to be the root bridge, with the root
bridge ID being its own device ID. By exchanging configuration BPDUs, the devices compare their root
bridge IDs to elect the device with the smallest root bridge ID as the root bridge.

Selection of the root port and designated ports on a non-root device

Table 13-3

describes the process of selecting the root port and designated ports.

Table 13-3

Selection of the root port and designated ports

Step

Description

1

A non-root-bridge device regards the port on which it received the optimum configuration BPDU

as the root port.

2

Based on the configuration BPDU and the path cost of the root port, the device calculates a

designated port configuration BPDU for each of the rest ports.

The root bridge ID is replaced with that of the configuration BPDU of the root port.

The root path cost is replaced with that of the configuration BPDU of the root port plus the

path cost of the root port.

The designated bridge ID is replaced with the ID of this device.

The designated port ID is replaced with the ID of this port.

3

The device compares the calculated configuration BPDU with the configuration BPDU on the port

of which the port role is to be defined, and acts depending on the comparison result:

If the calculated configuration BPDU is superior, the device considers this port as the

designated port, and replaces the configuration BPDU on the port with the calculated

configuration BPDU, which will be sent out periodically.

If the configuration BPDU on the port is superior, the device blocks this port without updating

its configuration BPDU. The blocked port can receive BPDUs but not send BPDUs or forward

data.

When the network topology is stable, only the root port and designated ports forward traffic, while other
ports are all in the blocked state – they receive BPDUs but do not forward BPDUs or user traffic.

A tree-shape topology forms upon successful election of the root bridge, the root port on each non-root
bridge and the designated ports.

The following is an example of how the STP algorithm works. As shown in

Figure 13-2

, assume that

the priority of Device A is 0, the priority of Device B is 1, the priority of Device C is 2, and the path costs
of these links are 5, 10 and 4 respectively.

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