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Cisco Best Practice

or What we really use!

  • vlans (802.11q)
  • stp
  • snmp → mrtg
  • security - dhcp helper
  • more static arp

STP - What it solves?

Something's missing, something's redundant?

  • missing - broken cable, lost connection, broken switch
  • redundant - badly placed cable, circles the network

STP can fix all of the above.

Redundant layer 2 redundacy problems

  • broadcast storm
  • multiple frame copies - which is basicly the same
  • ARP table instabilities (Cisco: CAM table)

Magic question - what is 32768?

Time tracking

  • 20 waiting for no BPDU
  • 15 unblock blocked ports and listening state for new BPDUs - topology change
  • 15 learning state, accepts all ethernet frames, learns MAC, but doesn't forward

First we obviously need to know, how to disable stp for end host device (designated forwarding port).

conf t
int fa 0/5
    spanning-tree portfast
end

STP

PVST+ - VLAN time

We make switch A root for VLAN 10

spanning-tree mode pvst
spanning-tree vlan 10 priority 16384

And switch B root for VLAN 20

spanning-tree mode pvst
spanning-tree vlan 20 priority 16384

See what happens:

RSTP - Is STP slow?

Yes, it is. New version Rapid STP doesn't have blocking port, rather has alternate port. Theory goes on the table, practicaly you doesn't have to know anything. Just type

spanning-tree mode rapid-pvst

Can I see STP?

show spanning-tree vlan 98

Little security

Let's suppose you're running an office network with STP. What if someone sent bad BPDU frames to you switches? He could re-route all the traffic throught his black-hat-notebook

There is no more or less static arp, but the interval could be longer.

 
linux/skoleni/cisco.1445125987.txt.gz · Last modified: 2015/10/18 01:53 by admin