D-Link DGS-1520 User Manual - Page 170

Q-2005 MSTP, 1D-1998 STP, Forwarding, Learning, Edge Port, P2P Port

Page 170 highlights

DGS-1520 Series Gigabit Ethernet Smart Managed Switch Web UI Reference Guide the transition states Disabled, Blocking, and Listening used in 802.1D-1998 and create a single state called Discarding. In either case, ports do not forward packets. In the STP port transition states Disabled, Blocking, or Listening or in the RSTP/MSTP port state Discarding, there is no functional difference, the port is not active in the network topology. The table below compares how the three protocols differ regarding the port state transition. All three protocols calculate a stable topology in the same way. Every segment will have a single path to the root bridge. All bridges listen for BPDU packets. However, BPDU packets are sent more frequently, with every Hello packet. BPDU packets are sent even if a BPDU packet was not received. Therefore, each link between bridges is sensitive to the status of the link. Ultimately, this difference results in faster detection of failed links, and therefore faster topology adjustment. A drawback of IEEE 802.1D-1998 is this absence of immediate feedback from adjacent bridges. 802.1Q-2005 MSTP Disabled Discarding Discarding Learning Forwarding 802.1D-2004 RSTP Disabled Discarding Discarding Learning Forwarding 802.1D-1998 STP Disabled Blocking Listening Learning Forwarding Forwarding No No No No Yes Learning No No No Yes Yes RSTP is capable of a more rapid transition to the Forwarding state. RSTP no longer relies on timer configurations and RSTP-compliant bridges are sensitive to feedback from other RSTP-compliant bridge links. Ports do not need to wait for the topology to stabilize before transitioning to a Forwarding state. In order to allow this rapid transition, the protocol introduces two new variables: the Edge Port and the Point-to-Point (P2P) port. Edge Port A port can be configured as an Edge Port if it is directly connected to a segment where a loop cannot be created. An example would be a port connected directly to a single workstation. Ports that are designated as edge ports transition to a forwarding state immediately without going through the Listening and Learning states. An Edge Port loses its status if it receives a BPDU packet, after which it immediately becomes a normal spanning tree port. P2P Port A P2P port is also capable of rapid transition. P2P ports may be used to connect to other bridges. Under RSTP/MSTP, all ports operating in full-duplex mode are considered to be P2P ports unless manually overridden through configuration. 802.1D-1998/802.1D-2004/802.1Q-2005 Compatibility MSTP or RSTP can interoperate with legacy equipment and are capable of automatically adjusting BPDU packets to 802.1D-1998 format when necessary. However, any segment using 802.1D-1998 STP will not benefit from the rapid transition and rapid topology change detection of MSTP or RSTP. The protocol also includes a variable used for migration in the event that legacy equipment on a segment is updated to use RSTP or MSTP. The Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) operates on two levels: • On the Switch level, the settings are globally implemented. • On the port level, the settings are implemented on a user-defined group of ports. 160

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DGS-1520 Series Gigabit Ethernet Smart Managed Switch Web UI Reference Guide
160
the transition states Disabled, Blocking, and Listening used in 802.1D-1998 and create a single state called
Discarding. In either case, ports do not forward packets. In the STP port transition states Disabled, Blocking, or
Listening or in the RSTP/MSTP port state Discarding, there is no functional difference, the port is not active in the
network topology. The table below compares how the three protocols differ regarding the port state transition.
All three protocols calculate a stable topology in the same way. Every segment will have a single path to the root
bridge. All bridges listen for BPDU packets. However, BPDU packets are sent more frequently, with every Hello
packet. BPDU packets are sent even if a BPDU packet was not received. Therefore, each link between bridges is
sensitive to the status of the link. Ultimately, this difference results in faster detection of failed links, and therefore
faster topology adjustment. A drawback of IEEE 802.1D-1998 is this absence of immediate feedback from adjacent
bridges.
802.1Q-2005 MSTP
802.1D-2004 RSTP
802.1D-1998 STP
Forwarding
Learning
Disabled
Disabled
Disabled
No
No
Discarding
Discarding
Blocking
No
No
Discarding
Discarding
Listening
No
No
Learning
Learning
Learning
No
Yes
Forwarding
Forwarding
Forwarding
Yes
Yes
RSTP is capable of a more rapid transition to the Forwarding state. RSTP no longer relies on timer configurations and
RSTP-compliant bridges are sensitive to feedback from other RSTP-compliant bridge links. Ports do not need to wait
for the topology to stabilize before transitioning to a Forwarding state. In order to allow this rapid transition, the
protocol introduces two new variables: the Edge Port and the Point-to-Point (P2P) port.
Edge Port
A port can be configured as an Edge Port if it is directly connected to a segment where a loop cannot be created. An
example would be a port connected directly to a single workstation. Ports that are designated as edge ports transition
to a forwarding state immediately without going through the Listening and Learning states. An Edge Port loses its
status if it receives a BPDU packet, after which it immediately becomes a normal spanning tree port.
P2P Port
A P2P port is also capable of rapid transition. P2P ports may be used to connect to other bridges. Under RSTP/MSTP,
all ports operating in full-duplex mode are considered to be P2P ports unless manually overridden through
configuration.
802.1D-1998/802.1D-2004/802.1Q-2005 Compatibility
MSTP or RSTP can interoperate with legacy equipment and are capable of automatically adjusting BPDU packets to
802.1D-1998 format when necessary. However, any segment using 802.1D-1998 STP will not benefit from the rapid
transition and rapid topology change detection of MSTP or RSTP. The protocol also includes a variable used for
migration in the event that legacy equipment on a segment is updated to use RSTP or MSTP.
The Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) operates on two levels:
On the Switch level, the settings are globally implemented.
On the port level, the settings are implemented on a user-defined group of ports.