From: Mas Kato (loomis_towcar@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sat Mar 02 2002 - 04:51:26 GMT-3
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There is really no way to guarantee that a switch _cannot_ become root in the s
panning tree it is participating in. You can max (64K) its bridge priority, but
if all the bridges are maxed, then the lowest MAC still wins. Another way to l
ook at it, if VLAN A contained just one bridge with spanning tree enabled, ther
e is nothing you can do to prevent it from becoming root on that VLAN. Turning
off spanning tree would certainly prevent it from ever becoming root, but it wo
uld also prevent it from detecting any loops as well.
Regards,
Mas Kato
https://ecardfile.com/id/mkato
> "Clark J" <clark.j@163.com> <ccielab@groupstudy.com> a question on SPANTREEDa
te: Sat, 2 Mar 2002 01:39:02 +0800
>Reply-To: "Clark J" <clark.j@163.com>
>
>Dear CCIEs and Near CCIEs,
> How to configure a switch so that it can't become the root switch in VLAN A
?
>Best regards,
>Clarke J
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