802.1w Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) and 802.1d Spanning Tree Protocol (STP)
802.1D Spanning-Tree Protocol (STP)
Terminology
Term
Definition
downlink port
A switch port that is linked to a port on another switch (or to an end node) that is sequentially
(downstream port)
further away from the STP root device. For example, port "C" in figure 14-11, above, is a
downlink port.
edge switch
For the purposes of fast-uplink STP, this is a switch that has no other switches connected to
its downlink ports. An edge switch is sequentially further from the root device than other
switches to which it is connected. Also termed
wiring closet switch
or
leaf switch
. For
example, switch "4" in figure 14-12 (page 28) is an edge switch.
interior switch
In an STP environment, a switch that is sequentially closer to the STP root device than one
or more other switches to which it is connected. For example, switches "1", "2", and "3" in
figure 14-12 (page 28) are interior switches.
single-instance spanning A single spanning-tree ensuring that there are no logical network loops associated with any
of the connections to the switch, regardless of whether there are any VLANs configured on
the switch. For more information, see "Spanning Tree Protocol (STP)" in chapter 9, "Configuring
Advanced Features", in the Management and Configuration Guide for your switch.
tree
uplink port
(upstream port)
A switch port linked to a port on another switch that is sequentially closer to the STP root
device. For example, ports "A" and "B" in figure 14-11 on page 27 are uplink ports.
wiring closet switch
Another term for an "edge" or "leaf" switch.
When single-instance spanning tree (STP) is running in a network and a
forwarding port goes down, a blocked port typically requires a period of
(2 x (
forward delay
) + link down detection)
to transition to forwarding. In a normal spanning tree environment, this
transition is usually 30 seconds (with the
Forward Delay
parameter set to its
default of 15 seconds). However, by using the fast-uplink spanning tree
feature, a port on a switch used as an
edge switch
can make this transition in
as little as ten seconds. (In an STP environment, an
edge switch
is a switch
that is connected only to switches that are closer to the STP root switch than
the edge switch itself, as shown by switch "4" in figure 14-12, below.)
Switch
4
(Edge)
Switch
3
Switch
1
(Root)
Switch
2
Port 3
Port 5
Link blocked by STP:
1
6
8
LAN
Figure 14-12. Example of an Edge Switch in a Topology Configured for STP Fast Uplink
In figure 14-12, STP is enabled and in its default configuration on all switches,
unless otherwise indicated in table 14-5, below:
14-28
Summary of Contents for ProCurve 6108
Page 2: ......
Page 18: ... This page is intentionally blank xvi ...
Page 50: ...Using the Menu Interface Where To Go From Here This page is intentionally unused 3 16 ...
Page 300: ...Port Based Virtual LANs VLANs and GVRP GVRP This page is intentionally unused 12 48 ...
Page 432: ...IP Routing Features Configuring DHCP Relay This page is intentionally unused 16 24 ...
Page 522: ...Troubleshooting Restoring a Flash Image This page is intentionally unused C 44 ...
Page 528: ...MAC Address Management Determining MAC Addresses This page is intentionally unused D 6 ...
Page 532: ...Daylight Savings Time on HP ProCurve Switches This page is intentionally unused E 4 ...
Page 546: ... This page is intentionally unused 14 Index ...