VES-1616F/1624F-44 User’s Guide
Chapter 10 Spanning Tree Protocol
97
C
H A P T E R
10
Spanning Tree Protocol
This chapter introduces the Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) and Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol
(RSTP).
10.1 STP/RSTP Overview
(R)STP detects and breaks network loops and provides backup links between switches,
bridges or routers. It allows a switch to interact with other (R)STP -compliant switches in your
network to ensure that only one path exists between any two stations on the network.
The switch uses IEEE 802.1w RSTP (Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol) that allows faster
convergence of the spanning tree than STP (while also being backwards compatible with STP-
only aware bridges). In RSTP, topology change information is directly propagated throughout
the network from the device that generates the topology change. In STP, a longer delay is
required as the device that causes a topology change first notifies the root bridge that then
notifies the network. Both RSTP and STP flush unwanted learned addresses from the filtering
database. In RSTP, the port states are Discarding, Learning, and Forwarding.
Note:
In this user’s guide, “STP” refers to both STP and RSTP.
10.1.1 STP Terminology
The root bridge is the base of the spanning tree; it is the bridge with the lowest identifier value
(MAC address).
Path cost is the cost of transmitting a frame onto a LAN through that port. It is assigned
according to the speed of the link to which a port is attached. The slower the media, the higher
the cost.
Table 26
STP Path Costs
LINK SPEED RECOMMENDED VALUE
RECOMMENDED
RANGE
ALLOWED RANGE
Path Cost 4Mbps
250
100 to 1000
1 to 65535
Path Cost 10Mbps
100
50 to 600
1 to 65535
Path Cost 16Mbps
62
40 to 400
1 to 65535
Path Cost 100Mbps
19
10 to 60
1 to 65535
Path Cost 1Gbps
4
3 to 10
1 to 65535
Path Cost 10Gbps
2
1 to 5
1 to 65535
Summary of Contents for VES-1616F-44
Page 1: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 VDSL Switch User s Guide Version 3 50 2 2007 Edition 2...
Page 9: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 8 Customer Support...
Page 23: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 22 List of Figures...
Page 27: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 26 List of Tables...
Page 53: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 52 Chapter 4 The Web Configurator...
Page 63: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 62 Chapter 5 System Status and Port Statistics...
Page 93: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 92 Chapter 7 VLAN...
Page 103: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 102 Chapter 10 Spanning Tree Protocol...
Page 117: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 116 Chapter 15 Port Authentication...
Page 139: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 138 Chapter 18 Queuing Method...
Page 145: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 144 Chapter 19 Classifier...
Page 150: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide Chapter 20 Policy 149 Figure 73 Policy Example...
Page 151: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 150 Chapter 20 Policy...
Page 157: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 156 Chapter 21 VLAN Stacking...
Page 165: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 164 Chapter 22 Multicast...
Page 173: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 172 Chapter 23 Multicast VLAN Registration...
Page 177: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 176 Chapter 24 DHCP...
Page 181: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 180 Chapter 25 Differentiated Services...
Page 182: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide Chapter 25 Differentiated Services 181...
Page 183: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 182 Chapter 25 Differentiated Services...
Page 193: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 192 Chapter 27 Maintenance...
Page 195: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 194 Chapter 28 Diagnostic...
Page 199: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 198 Chapter 29 Syslog...
Page 259: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 258 Chapter 33 Command Examples...
Page 267: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 266 Chapter 34 IEEE 802 1Q Tagged VLAN Commands...
Page 277: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 276 Chapter 35 Troubleshooting...
Page 281: ...VES 1616F 1624F 44 User s Guide 280 Product Specifications...