Allied Telesis AT-S111 User Manual

Page of 386
AT-GS950/48PS Switch Web Interface User’s Guide
367
Summary of Guidelines
Careful planning is essential for the successful implementation of MSTP. This 
section reviews all the rules and guidelines mentioned in earlier sections, and 
contains a few new ones:
The AT-GS950/48PS switch can support up to 32 multiple 
spanning tree instances, including the CIST, at a time.
A MSTI can contain any number of VLANs.
A VLAN can belong to only one MSTI at a time.
An MSTI ID can be from 1 to 15.
The CIST ID is 0. You cannot change this value.
A switch port can belong to more than one spanning tree 
instance at a time. This allows you to assign a port as an 
untagged and tagged member of VLANs that belong to 
different MSTIs. What makes this possible is a port’s ability 
to be in different MSTP states for different MSTIs 
simultaneously. For example, a port can be in the MSTP 
blocking state for one MSTI and the forwarding state for 
another spanning tree instance.
A network can contain any number of regions and a region 
can contain any number of AT-GS950/48PS switches.
The AT-GS950/48PS switch can belong to only one region 
at a time. 
A region can contain any number of VLANs.
All of the bridges in a region must have the same 
configuration name, revision level, VLANs, and VLAN to 
MSTI associations.
An MSTI cannot span multiple regions.
Each MSTI must have a regional root for locating loops in 
the instance. MSTIs can share the same regional root or 
have different roots. A regional root is determined by the 
MSTI priority value and a bridge’s MAC address.
The regional root of a MSTI must be in the same region as 
the MSTI.
The CIST must have a regional root for communicating 
with other regions and single-instance spanning trees.
MSTP is compatible with STP and RSTP.
A port transmits CIST information even when it is associated with another 
MSTI ID. However, in determining network loops, MSTI takes precedence 
over CIST. (This is explained more in “Associating VLANs to MSTIs” on 
page 363.