Asante Technologies 35516 User Manual
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Priority
Setting the bridge priority to a low value will increase the likelihood that the current bridge will become the root bridge. 
If the current bridge is located physically near the center of the network, decrease the Bridge Priority from its default 
value of 32768 to make it become the root bridge. If the current bridge is near the edge of the network, it is best to 
leave the value of the Bridge Priority at its default setting. 
In general, reducing the values of these timers will make the spanning tree react faster when the topology changes, 
but may cause temporary loops as the tree stabilizes in its new configuration. Increasing the values of these timers 
will make the tree react more slowly to changes in topology, but will make an unintended reconfiguration less likely. 
All of the bridges on the network will use the values set by the root bridge. It is only necessary to reconfigure that 
bridge if changing the parameters. 
Spanning Tree Port Configuration
You can configure the following parameters from interface configuration mode:
Router(config)# interface eth1 
Router(config-if-eth1)# spanning-tree ? 
 disable Disable spanning tree protocol in this interface 
 edg e-port Enable port admin edge 
 link-type Configure the link type 
 path-cost Set interface path cost 
 port-priority Set interface priority 
Router(config-if-eth1)# 
Port Priority
The port priority is a spanning tree parameter that ranks each port, so that if two or more ports have the same path 
cost, the STP selects the path with the highest priority (the lowest numerical value). By changing the priority of a port, 
it can be more, or less, likely to become the root port. The default value is 128, and the value range is 0–255. 
Port Path Cost
Port path cost is the spanning tree parameter that assigns a cost factor to each port. The lower the assigned port 
path cost is, the more likely that port will be accessed. The default port path cost for a 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps port is 
the result of the equation: 
Path cost = 1000/LAN speed (in Mbps)
Therefore, for 10 Mbps ports, the default port path cost is 100. For 100 Mbps ports, it is 10. To allow for faster 
networks, the port path cost for a 1000 Mbps port is set by the standard at 4. 
4.3.4 Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP)
Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol makes use of point-to-point link type and expedites into a rapid convergence of the 
spanning tree. Re-configuration of the spanning tree can occur in less than 1 second (as opposed to 50 seconds with 
the default settings in the legacy spanning tree), which is critical for networks carrying delay-sensitive traffic, such as 
voice and video. 
Port Roles and the Active Topology
RSTP provides rapid convergence of the spanning tree by assigning port roles and by determining the active 
topology. RSTP uses the same underlying spanning tree calculation and algorithm as legacy STP to select the bridge 
with the highest bridge priority (lowest numerical priority value) as the root bridge. Then RSTP assigns one of these 
port roles to bridge ports: 
