A bridge priority ranges from 0 to 65535, with 0 being the highest bridge priority.
On the port level, these terms are used:
♦Root Port. Each bridge has a root port except for the root bridge. This is the port that has the lowest path cost to the root bridge. In case there are several such ports, then the one with the lowest port identifier becomes the root port.
♦Port Identifier This is a combination of the port priority (a parameter that can be set) and the physical port number (a unique, unchangeable number assigned by the bridge).
♦Designated Port This is the port on each designated bridge that is attached to the LAN segment for which the bridge is the designated bridge.
♦Port Priority This parameter can be set. The smaller the number you set, the higher the port priority is. The higher the port priority, the higher the chance the port has for becoming the root port. Port priority ranges from 0 to 255, with 0 being the highest port priority.
♦Path Cost Use this parameter to specify preferred paths on the network. The smaller the path cost, the more chance the port of becoming the root port. By convention, a 10 Mbps LAN port has a path cost of 100, while a 100 Mbps port has a path cost of 10.
In the following figure, three
Only designated bridges have designated ports, so Switch 2 does not have any designated ports. Port 2 of Switch 2 becomes the root port because it has a lower root path cost to the root bridge than Port 1. For Switch 1, Port 1 is the root port, while Port 2 is the designated port. For Switch 3, both ports are designated ports.
44 | Using the Console Interface |