Cisco Systems EA6500 Manual De Usuario

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Catalyst 6500 Series Switch Cisco IOS Software Configuration Guide—Release 12.1 E
78-14099-04
Chapter 16      Configuring Optional STP Features
Understanding How BackboneFast Works
If Switch C detects a link failure on the currently active link L2 on the root port (a direct link failure), 
UplinkFast unblocks the blocked port on Switch C and transitions it to the forwarding state without 
going through the listening and learning states, as shown in 
. This switchover takes 
approximately one to five seconds.
Figure 16-2 UplinkFast Example After Direct Link Failure
Understanding How BackboneFast Works
BackboneFast is initiated when a root port or blocked port on a network device receives inferior BPDUs 
from its designated bridge. An inferior BPDU identifies one network device as both the root bridge and 
the designated bridge. When a network device receives an inferior BPDU, it indicates that a link to which 
the network device is not directly connected (an indirect link) has failed (that is, the designated bridge 
has lost its connection to the root bridge). Under normal STP rules, the network device ignores inferior 
BPDUs for the configured maximum aging time, as specified by the STP max-age command. 
The network device tries to determine if it has an alternate path to the root bridge. If the inferior BPDU 
arrives on a blocked port, the root port and other blocked ports on the network device become alternate 
paths to the root bridge. (Self-looped ports are not considered alternate paths to the root bridge.) If the 
inferior BPDU arrives on the root port, all blocked ports become alternate paths to the root bridge. If the 
inferior BPDU arrives on the root port and there are no blocked ports, the network device assumes that 
it has lost connectivity to the root bridge, causes the maximum aging time on the root to expire, and 
becomes the root bridge according to normal STP rules.
If the network device has alternate paths to the root bridge, it uses these alternate paths to transmit a new 
kind of Protocol Data Unit (PDU) called the Root Link Query PDU. The network device sends the Root 
Link Query PDU out all alternate paths to the root bridge. If the network device determines that it still 
has an alternate path to the root, it causes the maximum aging time to expire on the ports on which it 
received the inferior BPDU. If all the alternate paths to the root bridge indicate that the network device 
has lost connectivity to the root bridge, the network device causes the maximum aging times on the ports 
on which it received an inferior BPDU to expire. If one or more alternate paths can still connect to the 
root bridge, the network device makes all ports on which it received an inferior BPDU its designated 
ports and moves them out of the blocking state (if they were in the blocking state), through the listening 
and learning states, and into the forwarding state.
 shows an example topology with no link failures. Switch A, the root bridge, connects 
directly to Switch B over link L1 and to Switch C over link L2. The Layer 2 LAN interface on Switch C 
that connects directly to Switch B is in the blocking state. 
L1
L2
L3
Switch C
Switch A
(Root)
Switch B
UplinkFast transitions port
directly to forwarding state
Link failure
1
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