How does stp work – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 634

Advertising
background image

634

Configuring the Spanning Tree Protocol

recognize full-duplex connectivity and ports which are connected to end

stations, resulting in rapid transitioning of the port to the Forwarding state

and the suppression of Topology Change Notifications.
MSTP is compatible to both RSTP and STP. It behaves appropriately to STP

and RSTP bridges. A MSTP bridge can be configured to behave entirely as a

RSTP bridge or a STP bridge.

How Does STP Work?

The switches (bridges) that participate in the spanning tree elect a switch to

be the root bridge for the spanning tree. The root bridge is the switch with the

lowest bridge ID, which is computed from the unique identifier of the bridge

and its configurable priority number. When two switches have an equal

bridge ID value, the switch with the lowest MAC address is the root bridge.
After the root bridge is elected, each switch finds the lowest-cost path to the

root bridge. The port that connects the switch to the lowest-cost path is the

root port on the switch. The switches in the spanning tree also determine

which ports have the lowest-path cost for each segment. These ports are the

designated ports. Only the root ports and designated ports are placed in a

forwarding state to send and receive traffic. All other ports are put into a

blocked state to prevent redundant paths that might cause loops.
To determine the root path costs and maintain topology information,

switches that participate in the spanning tree use Bridge Protocol Data Units

(BPDUs) to exchange information.

Advertising