How Stp Works - HP V1910 User Manual

V1910 switch series
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Designated bridge and designated port
Description of designated bridges and designated ports
1.
Classification
For a device
For a LAN
As shown in a, AP1 and AP2, BP1 and BP2, and CP1 and CP2 are ports on Device A, Device B, and Device
C respectively.
If Device A forwards BPDUs to Device B through AP1, the designated bridge for Device B is Device A,
and the designated port of Device B is port AP1 on Device A.
Two devices are connected to the LAN: Device B and Device C. If Device B forwards BPDUs to the
LAN, the designated bridge for the LAN is Device B, and the designated port for the LAN is the port
BP2 on Device B.
A schematic diagram of designated bridges and designated ports
a.
Path cost
Path cost is a reference value used for link selection in STP. STP calculates path costs to select the most robust
links and block redundant links that are less robust, to prune the network into a loop-free tree.
NOTE:
All the ports on the root bridge are designated ports.

How STP works

The devices on a network exchange BPDUs to identify the network topology. Configuration BPDUs contain
sufficient information for the network devices to complete spanning tree calculation. Important fields in a
configuration BPDU include:
Root bridge ID: Comprises the priority and MAC address of the root bridge.
Designated bridge
A device directly connected with the local
device and responsible for forwarding
BPDUs to the local device
The device responsible for forwarding
BPDUs to this LAN segment
178
Designated port
The port through which the designated
bridge forwards BPDUs to this device
The port through which the designated
bridge forwards BPDUs to this LAN
segment

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