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Allied Telesis AT-S106 User Manual

Page 161

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AT-S106 Management Software Web Browser User’s Guide

161

State
Indicates one of the following port states:

ˆ

Blocking— A blocking state does not allow network traffic to be
sent or received on a the port except for BPDU data. A port with a
higher path cost to the root bridge than another on the switch
causes a switching loop and is placed in the blocking state by the
Spanning Tree algorithm. The port’s state may change to the
forwarding state if the other links in use fail and the Spanning Tree
algorithm determines the port may transition to the forwarding
state.

ˆ

Listening— This state occurs on a port during the convergence
process. The port in the listening state processes BPDUs and
awaits new information that would cause the port to return to the
blocking state.

ˆ

Learning— While the port does not yet forward frames (packets), in
this state the port does learn source addresses from frames
received and adds them to the filtering (switching) database.

ˆ

Forwarding— A port that both receives and sends data. This
indicates normal operation. STP continues to monitor the port for
incoming BPDUs that indicate the port should return to the blocking
state to prevent a loop.

ˆ

Disabled— This state is not strictly part of STP. However, a
network administrator can manually disable a port.

Role
Indicates one of the following port roles:

ˆ

Disabled—The Disabled Port role is assigned if the port is not
operational or is excluded from the active topology by management
or it is a network access port (IEEE Std 802.1X) and it is
Unauthorized, or its Administrative Bridge Port state is Disabled.

ˆ

Root— If the least cost path to the root is through this port, then it
becomes the root port for this bridge.

ˆ

Designated— If this is the designated bridge for the LAN and if this
port receives root path cost information that is greater than the root
port's path cost and less than any other port's received information,
then this port becomes the designated port.

ˆ

Backup— Any operational Bridge Port that is not a Root or
Designated Port is a Backup Port if the Bridge is the Designated
Bridge for the attached LAN.

ˆ

Alternate— Any operational Bridge Port that is not a Root or
a Designated Port is an Alternate Port if that Bridge is not the
Designated Bridge for the attached LAN.