3com 4210 PWR 9-Port 3CR17341-91-ME 用户手册

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3CR17341-91-ME
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MSTP Overview
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designated port begin to forward data as soon as they are elected, loops may 
temporarily occur.
For this reason, the protocol uses a state transition mechanism. Namely, a newly 
elected root port and the designated ports must go through a period, which is 
twice the forward delay time, before they transit to the forwarding state. The 
period allows the new configuration BPDUs to be propagated throughout the 
entire network.
Hello time, the interval for sending hello packets. Hello packets are used to 
check link state.
A switch sends hello packets to its neighboring devices at a regular interval (the 
hello time) to check whether the links are faulty.
Max time, lifetime of the configuration BPDUs stored in a switch. A 
configuration BPDU that has "expired" is discarded by the switch.
MSTP Overview
Background of MSTP
Disadvantages of STP and RSTP
STP does not support rapid state transition of ports. A newly elected root port or 
designated port must wait twice the forward delay time before transiting to the 
forwarding state, even if it is a port on a point-to-point link or it is an edge port 
(an edge port refers to a port that directly connects to a user terminal rather than 
to another device or a shared LAN segment.)
The rapid spanning tree protocol (RSTP) is an optimized version of STP. RSTP allows 
a newly elected root port or designated port to enter the forwarding state much 
quicker under certain conditions than in STP. As a result, it takes a shorter time for 
the network to reach the final topology stability.
In RSTP, the state of a root port can transit fast under the following conditions: 
the old root port on the device has stopped forwarding data and the upstream 
designated port has started forwarding data.
In RSTP, the state of a designated port can transit fast under the following 
conditions: the designated port is an edge port or a port connected with a 
point-to-point link. If the designated port is an edge port, it can enter the 
forwarding state directly; if the designated port is connected with a 
point-to-point link, it can enter the forwarding state immediately after the 
device undergoes handshake with the downstream device and gets a response.
RSTP supports rapid convergence. Like STP, it is of the following disadvantages: all 
bridges in a LAN are on the same spanning tree; redundant links cannot be 
blocked by VLAN; the packets of all VLANs are forwarded along the same 
spanning tree.
Features of MSTP
The multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP) overcomes the shortcomings of STP 
and RSTP. In addition to support for rapid network convergence, it also allows data 
flows of different VLANs to be forwarded along their own paths, thus providing a 
better load sharing mechanism for redundant links.
MSTP features the following: