Allied Telesis AT-S63 User Manual

Page of 514
AT-S63 Management Software Features Guide
Section V: Spanning Tree Protocols
227
Overview
As mentioned in Chapter 20, ”Spanning Tree and Rapid Spanning Tree 
Protocols” on page 213, STP a
nd RSTP are referred to as single-instance 
spanning trees that search for physical loops across all VLANs in a 
bridged network. When loops are detected, the protocols stop the loops by 
placing one or more bridge ports in a blocking state.
As explained in “Spanning Tree and VLANs” on page 224, STP and RSTP 
can result in VLAN fragmentation where VLANs that span multiple bridges 
are connected together with untagged ports. The untagged ports creating 
the links can represent a physical loop in the network, which are blocked 
by spanning tree. This can result in a loss of communication between 
different parts of the same VLAN.
One way to resolve this, other than by not activating spanning tree on your 
network, is to link the switches using tagged ports, which can handle traffic 
from multiple VLANs simultaneously. The drawback to this approach is 
that the link formed by the tagged ports can create a bottleneck to your 
Ethernet traffic, resulting in reduced network performance.
Another approach is to use the Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP). 
This spanning tree shares many of the same characteristics as RSTP. It 
features rapid convergence and has many of the same parameters. But 
the main difference is that while RSTP, just like STP, supports only a 
single-instance spanning tree, MSTP supports multiple spanning trees 
within a network.
The following sections describe some of the terms and concepts relating to 
MSTP. If you are not familiar with spanning tree or RSTP, you should first 
review “Overview” on page 215.
Note
Do not activate MSTP on the AT-9400 Switch without first 
familiarizing yourself with the following concepts and guidelines. 
Unlike STP and RSTP, you cannot activate this spanning tree 
protocol on a switch without first configuring the protocol 
parameters.
Note
The AT-S63 MSTP implementation complies fully with the new IEEE 
802.1s standard and should be interoperable with any other 
vendor’s fully compliant 802.1s implementation.