Cisco Systems 3560 Manual De Usuario

Descargar
Página de 1288
 
18-5
Catalyst 3560 Switch Software Configuration Guide
OL-8553-06
Chapter 18      Configuring MSTP
Understanding MSTP
IEEE 802.1s Terminology
Some MST naming conventions used in Cisco’s prestandard implementation have been changed to 
identify some internal or regional parameters. These parameters are significant only within an MST 
region, as opposed to external parameters that are relevant to the whole network. Because the CIST is 
the only spanning-tree instance that spans the whole network, only the CIST parameters require the 
external rather than the internal or regional qualifiers.
  •
The CIST root is the root switch for the unique instance that spans the whole network, the CIST.
  •
The CIST external root path cost is the cost to the CIST root. This cost is left unchanged within an 
MST region. Remember that an MST region looks like a single switch for the CIST. The CIST 
external root path cost is the root path cost calculated between these virtual switches and switches 
that do not belong to any region.
  •
The CIST regional root was called the IST master in the prestandard implementation. If the CIST 
root is in the region, the CIST regional root is the CIST root. Otherwise, the CIST regional root is 
the closest switch to the CIST root in the region. The CIST regional root acts as a root switch for 
the IST.
  •
The CIST internal root path cost is the cost to the CIST regional root in a region. This cost is only 
relevant to the IST, instance 0.
 compares the IEEE standard and the Cisco prestandard terminology.
Hop Count
The IST and MST instances do not use the message-age and maximum-age information in the 
configuration BPDU to compute the spanning-tree topology. Instead, they use the path cost to the root 
and a hop-count mechanism similar to the IP time-to-live (TTL) mechanism. 
By using the spanning-tree mst max-hops global configuration command, you can configure the 
maximum hops inside the region and apply it to the IST and all MST instances in that region. The hop 
count achieves the same result as the message-age information (triggers a reconfiguration). The root 
switch of the instance always sends a BPDU (or M-record) with a cost of 0 and the hop count set to the 
maximum value. When a switch receives this BPDU, it decrements the received remaining hop count by 
one and propagates this value as the remaining hop count in the BPDUs it generates. When the count 
reaches zero, the switch discards the BPDU and ages the information held for the port. 
The message-age and maximum-age information in the RSTP portion of the BPDU remain the same 
throughout the region, and the same values are propagated by the region designated ports at the 
boundary.
Table 18-1
Prestandard and Standard Terminology
IEEE Standard
Cisco Prestandard
Cisco Standard
CIST regional root
IST master
CIST regional root
CIST internal root path cost
IST master path cost
CIST internal path cost
CIST external root path cost
Root path cost
Root path cost
MSTI regional root
Instance root
Instance root
MSTI internal root path cost
Root path cost
Root path cost