An Example - 3Com SuperStack II Switch 3000 10/100 User Manual

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5-14
C
5: A
M
HAPTER
DVANCED
ANAGEMENT

An Example

Figure 5-11
illustrates part of a network. All bridges
have a path cost value assigned to each port, identi-
fied by PC=xxx (where xxx is the value).
Bridge A is selected by STP as the Root Bridge,
because it has the lowest Bridge Identifier. The Des-
ignated Bridge Port for LAN A is port 1 on Bridge A.
Each of the other four bridges have a Root Port (the
port closest to the Root Bridge). Bridge X and Bridge
B can offer the same path cost to LAN B. In this
case Bridge B's port is chosen as the Designated
Bridge Port, because it has the lowest Bridge Identi-
fier. Bridge C's port is chosen as the Designated
Bridge Port for LAN C because it offers the lowest
Root Path Cost (the route through Bridge C and B
has a cost of 200, the route through Bridge Y and B
has a cost of 300). You can set the path cost of a
bridge port to influence the configuration of a net-
work with a duplicate path.
Once the network topology is stable, all the bridges
listen for special Hello BPDUs transmitted from the
Root Bridge at regular intervals. If the STP Max Age
time of a bridge expires (refer to
"Configuring the
STP Parameters of VLANs"
on
page
5-17) before
receiving a Hello BPDU, the bridge assumes that
the Root Bridge, or a link between itself and the
Root Bridge, has gone down. The bridge then ini-
tiates a reconfiguration of the network topology.
You can adjust timers to determine how quickly a
network reconfigures and therefore how rapidly the
network recovers from a path failure (refer to
"Con-
figuring the STP Parameters of VLANs"
on
page
Figure 5-11
Port costs in a network
5-17).

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