C H A P T E R
18-1
Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Software Configuration Guide
OL-12247-04
18
Configuring STP
This chapter describes how to configure the Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) on port-based VLANs on the
switch. The switch can use either the per-VLAN spanning-tree plus (PVST+) protocol based on the
IEEE 802.1D standard and Cisco proprietary extensions, or the rapid per-VLAN spanning-tree plus
(rapid-PVST+) protocol based on the IEEE 802.1w standard. A switch stack appears as a single
spanning-tree node to the rest of the network, and all stack members use the same bridge ID. Unless
otherwise noted, the term
switch
refers to a standalone switch and to a switch stack.
For information about the Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP) and how to map multiple VLANs
to the same spanning-tree instance, see
Chapter 19, “Configuring MSTP.”
For information about other
spanning-tree features such as Port Fast, UplinkFast, root guard, and so forth, see
“Configuring Optional Spanning-Tree Features.”
Note
For complete syntax and usage information for the commands used in this chapter, see the command
reference for this release.
This chapter consists of these sections:
•
Understanding Spanning-Tree Features, page 18-1
•
Configuring Spanning-Tree Features, page 18-12
•
Displaying the Spanning-Tree Status, page 18-24
Understanding Spanning-Tree Features
These sections contain this conceptual information:
•
•
Spanning-Tree Topology and BPDUs, page 18-3
•
Bridge ID, Switch Priority, and Extended System ID, page 18-4
•
Spanning-Tree Interface States, page 18-5
•
How a Switch or Port Becomes the Root Switch or Root Port, page 18-8
•
Spanning Tree and Redundant Connectivity, page 18-8
•
Spanning-Tree Address Management, page 18-9
•
Accelerated Aging to Retain Connectivity, page 18-9
•