How csuf works – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 514

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20-6

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

OL-13270-03

Chapter 20 Configuring Optional Spanning-Tree Features

Understanding Optional Spanning-Tree Features

How CSUF Works

CSUF ensures that one link in the stack is elected as the path to the root. As shown in

Figure 20-5

, the

stack-root port on Switch 1 provides the path to the root of the spanning tree. The alternate stack-root
ports on Switches 2 and 3 can provide an alternate path to the spanning-tree root if the current stack-root
switch fails or if its link to the spanning-tree root fails.

Link 1, the root link, is in the spanning-tree forwarding state. Links 2 and 3 are alternate redundant links
that are in the spanning-tree blocking state. If Switch 1 fails, if its stack-root port fails, or if Link 1 fails,
CSUF selects either the alternate stack-root port on Switch 2 or Switch 3 and puts it into the forwarding
state in less than 1 second.

Figure 20-5

Cross-Stack UplinkFast Topology

When certain link loss or spanning-tree events occur (described in the

“Events that Cause Fast

Convergence” section on page 20-7

), the Fast Uplink Transition Protocol uses the neighbor list to send

fast-transition requests to stack members.

The switch sending the fast-transition request needs to do a fast transition to the forwarding state of a
port that it has chosen as the root port, and it must obtain an acknowledgement from each stack switch
before performing the fast transition.

Switch 1

Spanning-

tree root

Backbone

Blade switch stack

StackWise Plus
port connections

201790

Switch 2

StackWise Plus
port connections

Forward

Link 1
(Root link)

Link 2
(Alternate
redundant
link)

Link 3
(Alternate
redundant
link)

100 or 1000 Mbps

100 or 1000 Mbps

100 or 1000 Mbps

Forward

Forward

Switch 3 StackWise Plus

port connections

Stack-root port

Alternate stack-
root port

Alternate stack-
root port

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