7-4
Ethernet Card Software Feature and Configuration Guide, R7.2
January 2009
Chapter 7 Configuring STP and RSTP
Bridge ID, Switch Priority, and Extended System ID
Bridge ID, Switch Priority, and Extended System ID
The IEEE 802.1D standard requires that each switch has an un ique bridge identifier (bridge ID), which
determines the selection of the root switch. Because each VLAN is considered as a different
logical bridge with PVST+, the same switch must have as many different bridge IDs as VLANs
configured on it. Each VLAN on the switch has a unique 8-byte bri dge ID; the two most-significant bytes
are used for the switch priority, and the remaining six bytes are derived from the switch MAC address.
The ML-Series card supports the IEEE 802.1T spanning-tree extensions, and some of the bits previously
used for the switch priority are now used as the bridge ID. The result is that fewer MAC addresses are
reserved for the switch, and a larger range of VLAN IDs can be supported, all while maintaining the
uniqueness of the bridge ID. As shown in Tab le 7-1, the two bytes previously used for the switch priority
are reallocated into a 4-bit priority value and a 12-bit extended system ID value equal to the bridge ID.
In earlier releases, the switch priority is a 16-bit value.
Spanning tree uses the extended system ID, the switch priority, and the allocated spanning-tree MAC
address to make the bridge ID unique for each VLAN. With earlier releases, spanning tree used one MAC
address per VLAN to make the bridge ID unique for each VLAN.
Spanning-Tree Timers
Table 7-2 describes the timers that affect the entire spanning-tree perfo rmance.
Creating the Spanning-Tree Topology
In Figure 7-1, Switch A is elected as the root switch because the switch priority of all the switches is set
to the default (32768) and Switch A has the lowest MAC address. However, because of traffic patterns,
number of forwarding interfaces, or link types, Switch A might not be the ideal root switch. By
increasing the priority (lowering the numerical value) of the ideal switch so that it becomes the root
switch, you force a spanning-tree recalculation to form a new topology with the ideal switch as the root.
Table 7-1 Switch Priority Value and Extended System ID
Switch Priority Value Extended System ID (Set Equal to the Bridge ID)
Bit 16 Bit 15 Bit 14 Bit 13 Bit 12 Bit 11 Bit 10 Bit 9 Bit 8 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1
32768 16384 8192 4 096 2048 1024 512 256 128 64 32 16 8 4 2 1
Table 7-2 Spanning-Tree Timers
Variable Description
Hello timer When this timer expires, the interface sends out a Hello message to the
neighboring nodes.
Forward-delay timer Determines how long each of the listening and learning states last before the
interface begins forwarding.
Maximum-age timer Determines the amount of time the switch stores protocol information
received on an interface.