Mstp Region - Configuration; Introduction To Mstp - 3Com 8807 Configuration Manual

8800 series
Hide thumbs Also See for 8807:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

MSTP R
-
EGION
CONFIGURATION
17

Introduction to MSTP

MSTP stands for Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol, which is compatible with
Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) and Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP).
STP is not fast in state transition. Even on a point-to-point link or an edge port, it
has to take an interval twice as long as forward delay before the port transits to
the forwarding state.
RSTP converges fast, but has the following drawback like STP: all the network
bridges in a LAN share one spanning tree and the redundant links cannot be
blocked based on VLANs. Packets of all VLANs are forwarded along one spanning
tree.
MSTP makes up for the drawback of STP and RSTP. It not only converges fast, but
also allows the traffic of different VLANs to be distributed along their respective
paths, which provides a better load-balance mechanism for the redundant links.
MSTP keeps a VLAN mapping table to associate VLANs with their spanning trees.
Using MSTP, you can divide one switching network into multiple regions, each of
which can have multiple spanning trees with each one independent of others.
MSTP prunes the ring network into a loopfree tree to avoid the generation of
loops and infinite circulations. It also provides multiple redundant paths for data
forwarding to implement the load-balance mechanism of the VLAN data.
MSTP Concepts
There are 4 MST regions in Figure 23. Each region consists of four switches, all of
which run MSTP. The following introduces the concept of MSTP with the help of
this figure.

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

88108814

Table of Contents