D
ISPLAYING
G
LOBAL
S
ETTINGS
11-5
make it return to a discarding state; otherwise, temporary data loops
might result.
•
Designated Root
– The priority and MAC address of the device in the
Spanning Tree that this switch has accepted as the root device.
-
Root Port
– The number of the port on this switch that is closest to
the root. This switch communicates with the root device through this
port. If there is no root port, then this switch has been accepted as the
root device of the Spanning Tree network.
-
Root Path Cost
– The path cost from the root port on this switch to
the root device.
•
Configuration Changes
– The number of times the Spanning Tree has
been reconfigured.
•
Last Topology Change
– Time since the Spanning Tree was last
reconfigured.
These additional parameters are only displayed for the CLI:
•
Spanning tree mode
– Specifies the type of spanning tree used on this
switch:
-
STP
: Spanning Tree Protocol (IEEE 802.1D)
-
RSTP
: Rapid Spanning Tree (IEEE 802.1w)
-
MSTP
: Multiple Spanning Tree (IEEE 802.1s)
•
Instance
– Instance identifier of this spanning tree. (This is always 0 for
the CIST.)
•
VLANs configuration
– VLANs assigned to the CIST.
•
Priority
– Bridge priority is used in selecting the root device, root port,
and designated port. The device with the highest priority (i.e., lower
numeric value) becomes the STA root device. However, if all devices
have the same priority, the device with the lowest MAC address will then
become the root device.
•
Root Hello Time
– Interval (in seconds) at which this device transmits
a configuration message.
•
Root Maximum Age
– The maximum time (in seconds) this device can
wait without receiving a configuration message before attempting to
reconfigure. All device ports (except for designated ports) should receive
Summary of Contents for 7824M/FSW - annexe 1
Page 2: ......
Page 24: ...TABLE OF CONTENTS xxiv ...
Page 28: ...TABLES xxviii ...
Page 32: ...FIGURES xxxii Figure 16 3 DNS Cache 16 7 ...
Page 34: ...GETTING STARTED ...
Page 46: ...SYSTEM DEFAULTS 1 12 ...
Page 62: ...SWITCH MANAGEMENT ...
Page 74: ...CONFIGURING THE SWITCH 3 12 ...
Page 112: ...BASIC MANAGEMENT TASKS 4 38 ...
Page 168: ...USER AUTHENTICATION 6 30 ...
Page 223: ...SHOWING PORT STATISTICS 9 33 Figure 9 12 Port Statistics ...
Page 230: ...ADDRESS TABLE SETTINGS 10 6 ...
Page 304: ...CLASS OF SERVICE 13 16 ...
Page 316: ...QUALITY OF SERVICE 14 12 ...
Page 338: ...MULTICAST FILTERING 15 22 ...
Page 346: ...DOMAIN NAME SERVICE 16 8 ...
Page 348: ...COMMAND LINE INTERFACE IP Interface Commands 35 1 ...
Page 362: ...OVERVIEW OF COMMAND LINE INTERFACE 17 14 ...
Page 494: ...USER AUTHENTICATION COMMANDS 21 48 ...
Page 514: ...CLIENT SECURITY COMMANDS 22 20 ...
Page 540: ...ACCESS CONTROL LIST COMMANDS 23 26 ...
Page 558: ...INTERFACE COMMANDS 24 18 ...
Page 576: ...MIRROR PORT COMMANDS 26 4 ...
Page 582: ...RATE LIMIT COMMANDS 27 6 ...
Page 616: ...SPANNING TREE COMMANDS 29 28 ...
Page 644: ...VLAN COMMANDS 30 28 ...
Page 664: ...CLASS OF SERVICE COMMANDS 31 20 ...
Page 678: ...QUALITY OF SERVICE COMMANDS 32 14 ...
Page 720: ...APPENDICES ...
Page 726: ...SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS A 6 ...
Page 730: ...TROUBLESHOOTING B 4 ...
Page 746: ...INDEX Index 6 ...
Page 747: ......