What is stp – 3Com 1100 User Manual

Page 194

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C

HAPTER

9: S

PANNING

T

REE

P

ROTOCOL

What is STP?

Using the Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) makes your network more
resilient to link failure and also provides a protection from loops — one
of the major causes of broadcast storms.

STP is a bridge-based system that allows you to implement parallel paths
for network traffic and uses a loop-detection process to:

Find and disable the less efficient paths (that is, the paths that have a
lower bandwidth).

Enable one of the less efficient paths if the most efficient path fails.

As an example,

Figure 45

shows a network containing three LAN

segments separated by three bridges. With this configuration, each
segment can communicate with the others using two paths. Without STP,
this configuration creates loops that cause the network to overload;
however, STP allows you to have this configuration because it detects
duplicate paths and prevents, or blocks, one of them from forwarding
traffic.

Figure 46

shows the result of enabling STP on the bridges in the

configuration. The STP system has decided that traffic from LAN segment
2 to LAN segment 1 can only flow through Bridges C and A.

If the link through Bridge C fails, as shown in

Figure 47

, the STP process

reconfigures the network so that traffic from segment 2 flows through
Bridge B.

Figure 45 A network configuration that creates loops

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