RuggedCom RS400 Manual Do Utilizador

Página de 275
Spanning Tree 
 
 
ROS™  v3.5 
140 
RS400 
5.2.2.2 Port Roles: 
Each port on an MST bridge may have more than one role depending on the number and 
topology of spanning tree instances defined on the port. 
CIST Port Roles 
• The 
Root Port provides the minimum cost path from the bridge to the CIST Root via the 
CIST Regional Root. If the bridge itself happens to be the CIST Regional Root, the Root 
Port is also the Master Port for all MSTIs (see below), and provides the minimum cost path 
to a CIST Root located outside the region. 
• A 
Designated Port provides the minimum cost path from an attached LAN, via the bridge to 
the CIST Regional Root. 
•  Alternate and Backup Ports have the same sense that they do in RSTP, described in 5.1.1, 
under “Roles”, but relative to the CIST Regional Root. 
 
MSTI Port Roles 
For each MSTI on a bridge: 
• The 
Root Port provides the minimum cost path from the bridge to the MSTI Regional Root, if 
the bridge itself is not the MSTI Regional Root. 
• A 
Designated Port provides the minimum cost path from an attached LAN, via the bridge to 
the MSTI Regional Root. 
•  Alternate and Backup Ports have the same sense that they do in RSTP, described in 5.1.1, 
under “Roles”, but relative to the MSTI Regional Root. 
 
The Master Port, which is unique in an MST region, is the CIST Root Port of the CIST Regional 
Root, and provides the minimum cost path to the CIST Root for all MSTIs.  
Boundary Ports 
Boundary Port is a port on a bridge in an MST region that connects to either of: 1) a bridge 
belonging to a different MST region, or 2) a bridge supporting only RSTP or legacy STP. A 
Boundary Port blocks or forwards all VLANs from all MSTIs and the CIST alike. A Boundary 
Port may be: 
•  The CIST Root Port of the CIST Regional Root (and therefore also the MSTI Master Port), 
•  A CIST Designated Port, CIST Alternate / Backup Port, or Disabled. At the MST region 
boundary, the MSTI Port Role is the same as the CIST Port Role. 
 
A Boundary Port connected to an STP bridge will send only STP BPDUs. One connected to an 
RSTP bridge need not refrain from sending MSTP BPDUs. This is made possible by the fact 
that the MSTP carries the CIST Regional Root Identifier in the field that RSTP parses as the 
Designated Bridge Identifier.