Allied Telesis AT-S111 User Manual

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Appendix A: MSTP Overview
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Multiple Spanning Tree Instance (MSTI)
The individual spanning trees in MSTP are referred to as Multiple Spanning 
Tree Instances (MSTIs). A MSTI can span any number of 
AT-GS950 switches. The switch can support up to 31 MSTIs at a time.
Before creating a MSTI, you first enable MSTP. Then you must assign the 
MSTI a unique number, referred to as the MSTI ID. The range is 1 to 31. After 
you have selected an MSTI ID, you need to define the scope of the MSTI by 
assigning one or more VLANs to it. An instance can contain any number of 
VLANs, but a VLAN can belong to only one MSTI at a time.
Resolving VLAN
Fragmentation
Following are several examples of how MSTP can be applied. 
Figure 139 illustrates two AT-GS950/48PS switches, each containing the two 
VLANs Sales and Production. The ports of each VLAN on each switch are 
connected with a direct link using untagged ports. If the switches were running 
STP or RSTP, one of these two links would be blocked because the links 
constitute a physical loop. Which link would be blocked depends on the STP 
or RSTP bridge settings. In Figure 139, the link between the two ports of the 
Production VLAN is blocked, resulting in a loss of communications between 
the two parts of the Production VLAN.
Figure 139. VLAN Fragmentation with STP or RSTP
Figure 140 on page 353 illustrates the same two AT-GS950/48PS switches 
and the same two virtual LANs. But in this example, the two switches are 
running MSTP and the two VLANs have been assigned different spanning tree 
instances. Now that they reside in different MSTIs, both links remain active, 
enabling the VLANs to forward traffic over their respective direct link.