Interoperability With Ieee 802.1D Stp; Understanding Rstp - Cisco Catalyst 2928 Software Configuration Manual

Ios release 12.2(55)ez
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Understanding RSTP

Figure 17-3
root switch, and its BPDUs are lost on the link leading to switch B. RSTP and MST BPDUs include the
role and state of the sending port. With this information, switch A can detect that switch B does not react
to the superior BPDUs it sends and that switch B is the designated, not root switch. As a result, switch
A blocks (or keeps blocking) its port, thus preventing the bridging loop.
Figure 17-3
Switch

Interoperability with IEEE 802.1D STP

A switch running MSTP supports a built-in protocol migration mechanism that enables it to interoperate
with legacy IEEE 802.1D switches. If this switch receives a legacy IEEE 802.1D configuration BPDU
(a BPDU with the protocol version set to 0), it sends only IEEE 802.1D BPDUs on that port. An MSTP
switch also can detect that a port is at the boundary of a region when it receives a legacy BPDU, an MSTP
BPDU (Version 3) associated with a different region, or an RSTP BPDU (Version 2).
However, the switch does not automatically revert to the MSTP mode if it no longer receives
IEEE 802.1D BPDUs because it cannot detect whether the legacy switch has been removed from the link
unless the legacy switch is the designated switch. A switch might also continue to assign a boundary role
to a port when the switch to which this switch is connected has joined the region. To restart the protocol
migration process (force the renegotiation with neighboring switches), use the clear spanning-tree
detected-protocols privileged EXEC command.
If all the legacy switches on the link are RSTP switches, they can process MSTP BPDUs as if they are
RSTP BPDUs. Therefore, MSTP switches send either a Version 0 configuration and TCN BPDUs or
Version 3 MSTP BPDUs on a boundary port. A boundary port connects to a LAN, the designated switch
of which is either a single spanning-tree switch or a switch with a different MST configuration.
Understanding RSTP
The RSTP takes advantage of point-to-point wiring and provides rapid convergence of the spanning tree.
Reconfiguration of the spanning tree can occur in less than 1 second (in contrast to 50 seconds with the
default settings in the IEEE 802.1D spanning tree).
These sections describe how the RSTP works:
For configuration information, see the
Catalyst 2928 Switch Software Configuration Guide
17-8
illustrates a unidirectional link failure that typically creates a bridging loop. Switch A is the
Detecting Unidirectional Link Failure
Superior
BPDU
A
Inferior BPDU,
Designated + Learning bit set
Port Roles and the Active Topology, page 17-9
Rapid Convergence, page 17-9
Synchronization of Port Roles, page 17-11
Bridge Protocol Data Unit Format and Processing, page 17-12
Switch
B
"Configuring MSTP Features" section on page
Chapter 17
Configuring MSTP
17-13.
OL-23389-01

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