Re: Amazing Spanning Tree [7:74594]
I always like to think of Spanning Tree in respect to the numbers on a clock. If the information goes around in a circle, you only need 1 blocking port to disrupt the circle. You don't need to block in two parts of the circle. The Sybex CCNA book had an excellent example of this (I got my CCNA June 30th, 911/1000)... they had the explaination on one page, then you turn the page and they had 5 switches. The diagram made all the sense in the world. Which is kind of where I got my clock analogy. If you're disrupting the loop at the 12 spot on the clock, you don't need to disrupt it anywhere else. -- Fred Curious wrote: Hello friends, I have an spanning tree question for you! I have a lot of switches connected between them, but I have seen something that I can not explain very well. Two of these switches are connected using two cables: Switch1 Switch2 Port 29 - Port 29 Port 30 - Port 30 I expected to see one port in blocking state (spanning-tree) and the other in forwarding state, but suprisingly I have seen that port 30 is in blocking state in Switch1 but it is in forwarding state in Switch 2. Let's see these outputs: Switch1#sh spanning-tree interface FastEthernet 0/29 Interface Fa0/29 (port 35) in Spanning tree 1 is FORWARDING Port path cost 19, Port priority 128 Designated root has priority 32768, address 0002.fd3c.18b5 Designated bridge has priority 32768, address 0005.5e0c.57b6 Designated port is 35, path cost 23 Timers: message age 0, forward delay 0, hold 0 Switch1#sh spanning-tree interface FastEthernet 0/30 Interface Fa0/30 (port 36) in Spanning tree 1 is FORWARDING Port path cost 19, Port priority 128 Designated root has priority 32768, address 0002.fd3c.18b5 Designated bridge has priority 32768, address 0005.5e0c.57b6 Designated port is 36, path cost 23 Timers: message age 0, forward delay 0, hold 0 BPDU: sent 264503, received 2 Switch2#sh spanning-tree interface FAstEthernet 0/29 Interface Fa0/29 (port 35) in Spanning tree 1 is FORWARDING Port path cost 19, Port priority 128 Designated root has priority 32768, address 0002.fd3c.18b5 Designated bridge has priority 32768, address 0005.5e0c.57b6 Designated port is 35, path cost 23 Timers: message age 4, forward delay 0, hold 0 BPDU: sent 2, received 264561 Switch2#sh spanning-tree interface FAstEthernet 0/30 Interface Fa0/30 (port 36) in Spanning tree 1 is BLOCKING Port path cost 19, Port priority 128 Designated root has priority 32768, address 0002.fd3c.18b5 Designated bridge has priority 32768, address 0005.5e0c.57b6 Designated port is 36, path cost 23 Timers: message age 3, forward delay 0, hold 0 BPDU: sent 2, received 264573 Why a port is in blocking state and the other is in forwarding??? I expected to see both ports in blocking, but one forwarding and the other blocking doesn't make sense!!! Thanks a lot! **Please support GroupStudy by purchasing from the GroupStudy Store: http://shop.groupstudy.com FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=74602t=74594 -- **Please support GroupStudy by purchasing from the GroupStudy Store: http://shop.groupstudy.com FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
Re: Amazing Spanning Tree [7:74594]
I always like to think of Spanning Tree in respect to the numbers on a clock. If the information goes around in a circle, you only need 1 blocking port to disrupt the circle. You don't need to block in two parts of the circle. The Sybex CCNA book had an excellent example of this (I got my CCNA June 30th, 911/1000)... they had the explaination on one page, then you turn the page and they had 5 switches. The diagram made all the sense in the world. Which is kind of where I got my clock analogy. If you're disrupting the loop at the 12 spot on the clock, you don't need to disrupt it anywhere else. -- Fred Curious wrote: Hello friends, I have an spanning tree question for you! I have a lot of switches connected between them, but I have seen something that I can not explain very well. Two of these switches are connected using two cables: Switch1 Switch2 Port 29 - Port 29 Port 30 - Port 30 I expected to see one port in blocking state (spanning-tree) and the other in forwarding state, but suprisingly I have seen that port 30 is in blocking state in Switch1 but it is in forwarding state in Switch 2. Let's see these outputs: Switch1#sh spanning-tree interface FastEthernet 0/29 Interface Fa0/29 (port 35) in Spanning tree 1 is FORWARDING Port path cost 19, Port priority 128 Designated root has priority 32768, address 0002.fd3c.18b5 Designated bridge has priority 32768, address 0005.5e0c.57b6 Designated port is 35, path cost 23 Timers: message age 0, forward delay 0, hold 0 Switch1#sh spanning-tree interface FastEthernet 0/30 Interface Fa0/30 (port 36) in Spanning tree 1 is FORWARDING Port path cost 19, Port priority 128 Designated root has priority 32768, address 0002.fd3c.18b5 Designated bridge has priority 32768, address 0005.5e0c.57b6 Designated port is 36, path cost 23 Timers: message age 0, forward delay 0, hold 0 BPDU: sent 264503, received 2 Switch2#sh spanning-tree interface FAstEthernet 0/29 Interface Fa0/29 (port 35) in Spanning tree 1 is FORWARDING Port path cost 19, Port priority 128 Designated root has priority 32768, address 0002.fd3c.18b5 Designated bridge has priority 32768, address 0005.5e0c.57b6 Designated port is 35, path cost 23 Timers: message age 4, forward delay 0, hold 0 BPDU: sent 2, received 264561 Switch2#sh spanning-tree interface FAstEthernet 0/30 Interface Fa0/30 (port 36) in Spanning tree 1 is BLOCKING Port path cost 19, Port priority 128 Designated root has priority 32768, address 0002.fd3c.18b5 Designated bridge has priority 32768, address 0005.5e0c.57b6 Designated port is 36, path cost 23 Timers: message age 3, forward delay 0, hold 0 BPDU: sent 2, received 264573 Why a port is in blocking state and the other is in forwarding??? I expected to see both ports in blocking, but one forwarding and the other blocking doesn't make sense!!! Thanks a lot! **Please support GroupStudy by purchasing from the GroupStudy Store: http://shop.groupstudy.com FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=74601t=74594 -- **Please support GroupStudy by purchasing from the GroupStudy Store: http://shop.groupstudy.com FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html