Per-Vlan Spanning Tree Groups; Using Multiple Stgs To Eliminate False Loops; Vlans And Stg Assignment - IBM RackSwitch G8000 Application Manual

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Per-VLAN Spanning Tree Groups

Using Multiple STGs to Eliminate False Loops

VLANs and STG Assignment

© Copyright IBM Corp. 2011
PVRST mode supports a maximum of 128 STGs, with each STG acting as an
independent, simultaneous instance of STP.
Multiple STGs provide multiple data paths which can be used for load-balancing and
redundancy. To enable load balancing between two G8000s using multiple STGs,
configure each path with a different VLAN and then assign each VLAN to a separate
STG. Since each STG is independent, they each send their own IEEE 802.1Q
tagged Bridge Protocol Data Units (BPDUs).
Each STG behaves as a bridge group and forms a loop-free topology. The default
STG 1 may contain multiple VLANs (typically until they can be assigned to another
STG). STGs 2-128 may contain only one VLAN each.
Figure 12
shows a simple example of why multiple STGs are needed. In the figure,
two ports on a G8000 are connected to two ports on an application switch. Each of
the links is configured for a different VLAN, preventing a network loop. However, in
the first network, since a single instance of Spanning Tree is running on all the ports
of the G8000, a physical loop is assumed to exist, and one of the VLANs is blocked,
impacting connectivity even though no actual loop exists.
Figure 12. Using Multiple Instances of Spanning Tree Group
Switch 1
False
x
Loop
Application Switch
With a single Spanning Tree,
one link becomes blocked.
In the second network, the problem of improper link blocking is resolved when the
VLANs are placed into different Spanning Tree Groups (STGs). Since each STG
has its own independent instance of Spanning Tree, each STG is responsible only
for the loops within its own VLAN. This eliminates the false loop, and allows both
VLANs to forward packets between the switches at the same time.
In PVRST mode, up to 128 STGs are supported. Ports cannot be added directly to
an STG. Instead, ports must be added as members of a VLAN, and the VLAN must
then be assigned to the STG.
STG 1 is the default STG. Although VLANs can be added to or deleted from default
STG 1, the STG itself cannot be deleted from the system. By default, STG 1 is
enabled and includes VLAN 1, which by default includes all switch ports.
Switch 2
STG 1
VLAN 1
is active
Application Switch
Using multiple STGs,
both links may be active.
Chapter 10. Spanning Tree Protocols
STG 2
VLAN 30
is active
121

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