User’s Manual of NS3550-24T/4S
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The port identifier of the transmitting port
The switch sends BPDUs to communicate and construct the spanning-tree topology. All switches connected to the LAN on which
the packet is transmitted will receive the BPDU. BPDU does’nt directly forward by the switch, but the receiving switch uses the
information in the frame to calculate a BPDU, and, if the topology changes, initiates a BPDU transmission.
The communication between switches via BPDUs results in the following:
One switch is elected as the root switch
The shortest distance to the root switch is calculated for each switch
A designated switch is selected. This is the switch closest to the root switch through which packets will be forwarded
to the root.
A port for each switch is selected. This is the port providing the best path from the switch to the root switch.
Ports included in the STP are selected.
Creating a Stable STP Topology
It is to make the root port a fastest link. If all switches have STP enabled with default settings, the switch with the lowest MAC
address in the network will become the root switch. By increasing the priority (lowering the priority number) of the best switch,
STP can be forced to select the best switch as the root switch.
When STP is enabled using the default parameters, the path between source and destination stations in a switched network
might not be ideal. For instance, connecting higher-speed links to a port that has a higher number than the current root port can
cause a root-port change.
STP Port States
The BPDUs take some time to pass through a network. This propagation delay can result in topology changes where a port that
transitioned directly from a Blocking state to a Forwarding state could create temporary data loops. Ports must wait for new
network topology information to propagate throughout the network before starting to forward packets. They must also wait for the
packet lifetime to expire for BPDU packets that were forwarded based on the old topology. The forward delay timer is used to
allow the network topology to stabilize after a topology change. In addition, STP specifies a series of states a port must transition
through to further ensure that a stable network topology is created after a topology change.
Each port on a switch using STP exists is in one of the following five states:
Blocking
– the port is blocked from forwarding or receiving packets
Listening
– the port is waiting to receive BPDU packets that may tell the port to go back to the blocking state
Learning
– the port is adding addresses to its forwarding database, but not yet forwarding packets
Forwarding
– the port is forwarding packets
Disabled
– the port only responds to network management messages and must return to the blocking state first
A port transitions from one state to another as follows:
From initialization (switch boot) to blocking
From blocking to listening or to disabled
From listening to learning or to disabled
From learning to forwarding or to disabled
From forwarding to disabled
From disabled to blocking
Summary of Contents for IFS NS3550-24T/4S
Page 1: ...P N 1072569 REV 00 05 ISS 11OCT12 IFS NS3550 24T 4S User Manual ...
Page 37: ...User s Manual of NS3550 24T 4S 37 ...
Page 96: ...96 Figure 4 4 6 Port Mirror Configuration Page Screenshot ...
Page 127: ...User s Manual of NS3550 24T 4S 127 Figure 4 6 10 Port 1 Port 6 VLAN Configuration ...
Page 184: ...184 Figure 4 9 14 Voice VLAN Configuration Page Screenshot ...
Page 204: ...204 Figure 4 11 4 Network Access Server Configuration Page Screenshot ...
Page 234: ...234 Figure 4 12 1 Port Limit Control Configuration Overview Page Screenshot ...
Page 250: ...250 Click to undo any changes made locally and revert to previously saved values ...
Page 297: ...User s Manual of NS3550 24T 4S 297 ...
Page 388: ...388 Example Show RADIUS statistics SWITCH security aaa statistics ...
Page 410: ...410 Parameters vid VLAN ID 1 4095 Default Setting disable ...