3com 7600 Benutzerhandbuch

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11-8
C
HAPTER
 11: E
THERNET
 LAN
S
 
AND
 B
RIDGES
 
IN
 
THE
 7600 C
ARD
Static Addresses
The network manager may want to restrict a particular station to 
communicate only through specific input and output bridge ports in 
order to keep its traffic confined to certain portions of the network 
topology. Or, he may want to maintain a station that transmits so 
infrequently that it would be aged-out by the aging mechanism. For 
these cases the learning method is not suitable. Instead, the FDB provides 
for address entries called static addresses. These are entered or removed 
manually by the operator (and are therefore also called Management 
addresses) or they can be supplied with the device. The Read-only address 
is a special type of static address which is supplied with the device for 
internal use and cannot be altered. An example of a Read-only address is 
the address of a bridge port, called “Self”.
Defining
permanency of
static addresses
In the 7600 Card, static addresses with various degrees of permanency 
can be defined as follows: 
Q
Permanent - Entries that remain in the FDB when the device is reset
Q
Delete-on-Reset - Entries that are deleted when the device is reset
Q
Delete-on-Timeout - Static entry that is deleted after the aging time
Allowed ports for
static addresses
Input and output bridge ports assigned (allowed) to a static address are 
entered or removed by the operator or are predefined. Static addresses 
can be addresses of individual destination stations but they are more 
frequently multicast addresses - addresses which include a group of 
destination stations. A packet with a multicast address normally needs to 
be transmitted on more than one bridge port in order to reach all the 
destination stations. Consequently, multiple output bridge ports are often 
allowed to a single static address. For data display, multiple allowed 
output ports are coded into a single binary number. Normally, one input 
(or receiving) port is allowed to a static address, but it is also possible to 
designate all ports as allowed receiving ports.
Blocking ports for
static addresses
Instead of specifying the allowed input and output bridge ports for a 
static address, it is sometimes more convenient to specify those input and 
output bridge ports which are not allowed for that address (blocked 
ports). Then all ports other than the blocked ports can receive and 
transmit for that address.
Spanning Tree 
Protocol
When designing a bridged-LAN environment is it desirable to build 
redundant bridge links between LANs: in case one link fails, another can 
serve as a backup. However, when a LAN is attached to two or more 
abtthgde.book  Page 8  Tuesday, June 23, 1998  10:29 AM