Principle of mstp, Mstp implementation on switches – H3C Technologies H3C S3100 Series Switches User Manual

Page 233

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1-14

z

Forwarding state. Ports in this state can forward user packets and receive/send BPDUs.

z

Learning state. Ports in this state can receive/send BPDUs but do not forward user packets.

z

Discarding state. Ports in this state can only receive BPDUs.

Port roles and port states are not mutually dependent.

Table 1-6

lists possible combinations of port

states and port roles.

Table 1-6

Combinations of port states and port roles

Port role

Port state

Root/master

port

Designated

port

Region

Boundary

port

Alternate

port

Backup

port

Forwarding

√ —

Learning

√ —

Discarding

Principle of MSTP

MSTP divides a Layer 2 network into multiple MST regions. The CSTs are generated between these
MST regions, and multiple spanning trees (also called MSTIs) can be generated in each MST region. As
well as RSTP, MSTP uses configuration BPDUs for spanning tree calculation. The only difference is that
the configuration BPDUs for MSTP carry the MSTP configuration information on the switches.

1) Calculate

the

CIST

Through comparing configuration BPDUs, the switch of the highest priority in the network is selected as
the root of the CIST. In each MST region, an IST is calculated by MSTP. At the same time, MSTP
regards each MST region as a switch to calculate the CSTs of the network. The CSTs, together with the
ISTs, form the CIST of the network.

2) Calculate an MSTI

Within an MST region, MSTP generates different MSTIs for different VLANs based on the
VLAN-to-instance mappings. MSTP performs a separate calculation process, which is similar to
spanning tree calculation in STP, for each spanning tree. For details, refer to

How STP works

.

In MSTP, a VLAN packet is forwarded along the following paths:

z

Within an MST region, the packet is forwarded along the corresponding MSTI.

z

Between two MST regions, the packet is forwarded along the CST.

MSTP Implementation on Switches

MSTP is compatible with both STP and RSTP. That is, MSTP-enabled switches can recognize the
protocol packets of STP and RSTP and use them for their respective spanning tree calculation.

The S3100 series switches support MSTP. After MSTP is enabled on an S3100 series switch, the switch
operates in MSTP mode by default. If the network contains switches that run the STP/RSTP protocol,
you can use commands to configure the S3100 series switch to operate in STP-compatible mode or
RSTP-compatible mode (see

Configuring the MSTP Operation Mode

for more information):

z

In STP-compatible mode, all ports of the S3100 series switch send out STP BPDUs

z

In RSTP mode, all ports of the S3100 series switch send out RSTP BPDUs.

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