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Designated bridge and designated port, Path cost, How stp works – H3C Technologies H3C SecPath F1000-E User Manual

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Designated bridge and designated port

Table 9 Description of designated bridges and designated ports

Classification

Designated bridge

Designated port

For a device

A device directly connected to the local
device and responsible for forwarding

BPDUs to the local device.

The port through which the designated
bridge forwards BPDUs to this device.

For a LAN

The device responsible for forwarding
BPDUs to this LAN segment.

The port through which the designated
bridge forwards BPDUs to this LAN

segment.

As shown in

Figure 39

, Device B and Device C directly connected to a LAN.

If Device A forwards BPDUs to Device B through AP1, the designated bridge for Device B is Device

A, and the designated port of Device B is port AP1 on Device A.

If Device B forwards BPDUs to the LAN, the designated bridge for the LAN is Device B, and the
designated port for the LAN is the port BP2 on Device B.

Figure 39 Schematic diagram of designated bridges and designated ports

NOTE:

All the ports on the root bridge are designated ports.

Path cost

Path cost is a reference value used for link selection in STP. STP calculates path costs to select the most

robust links and blocks redundant links that are less robust, to prune the network into a loop-free tree.

How STP works

The devices on a network exchange BPDUs to identify the network topology. Configuration BPDUs
contain sufficient information for the network devices to complete spanning tree calculation. A

configuration BPDU includes the following important fields:

Root bridge ID—Consisting of the priority and MAC address of the root bridge.

Root path cost—The path cost to the root bridge.

Designated bridge ID—Consisting of the priority and MAC address of the designated bridge.