T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1153.1 | It defaults 802.1d but also supports LB100 | NACAD2::BATTERSBY | | Fri Jun 24 1994 10:02 | 7 |
| It defaults to 802.1d, but also supports Digital LB100 mode, and
so also supports automatic detection of LB100 and switchover to
the appropriate STP. I think a means of locking it in 802.1d if
necessary is provided through HUBwatch. The fact that it supports
both modes though, means it will autoselect without needing HUBwatch.
Bob
|
1153.2 | elanext MIB, ebrLB100SpanningTreeCompat | SLINK::HOOD | I'd rather be at the Kennebec | Fri Jun 24 1994 10:59 | 7 |
| To set the default spanning tree mode, you need either HUBwatch or any
SNMP management tool. The MIB variable is ebrLB100SpanningTreeCompat
from the DEC elanext MIB. autoSelect(1) lets the bridge decide. ieee802(2)
locks it into 802 mode.
Tom Hood
HUBwatch
|
1153.3 | Clarification please! | KERNEL::WARDJO | | Wed Jul 06 1994 07:52 | 18 |
| Thanks for the replies.
Just to clarify. If I purchase a Decbridge 900, by default it should
come up set to autoselect (Running 802.1d spanning tree but capable of
switching to lanbridge 100 if it sees Lan bridge 100 hellos).
If I want to, I can lock the bridge into 802.1d with management
software.
Is this correct?
Thanks,
Jon
P.S. Does anyone know what the default root priority and associated
cost is for the decbridge 900?
|
1153.4 | Some answers for you.... | NACAD2::BATTERSBY | | Wed Jul 06 1994 10:17 | 13 |
| Hi Jon, you're correct. The DECbridge 900MX defaults to autoselect
and defaults to 802.1d STP, and you can lock it down in 802.1d if
you choose. I would suggest that you do not do this, unless you
absolutely have to though. You don't want to have more than one
spanning tree topology running amuck in your LAN, it could raise
havoc in your LAN.
On the parameters you asked about, I do recall that the typical values
used for other DEC bridges which support 802.1d, the root priority
usually defaults to 128, the "Port cost" defaults to a value of 10,
and the "Root path cost" defaults to a value of 40. I don't recall
whether the DB900MX values are exactly the same as these though.
Bob
|
1153.5 | And in addition | NACAD2::BATTERSBY | | Wed Jul 06 1994 10:21 | 5 |
| BTW the Root Priority and Root Path cost are defined by the
Root bridge in your extended LAN, and all other bridges use
these values.
Bob
|
1153.6 | Looks like default is IEEE 802 | KERNEL::WARDJO | | Wed Jul 06 1994 12:14 | 18 |
| Thanks for the quick response,
Well, I've just managed to get hold of a DECbridge900 and checked what
the defaults are. As far as I can see the default setting for the bridge is
IEEE 802 - You can change this to autoselect if required from within
Hubwatch.
I tested this by selecting autoselect from within Hubwatch and then
doing a factory reset - it was reset to IEEE 802.
This seems to be the opposite from what was said earlier and I must
admit does appear to be the wrong way round.
Any comments anyone ?
Jon
|
1153.7 | Your observations are correct... | NACAD2::BATTERSBY | | Wed Jul 06 1994 12:56 | 5 |
| I goofed, I meant that the default *is* 802.1d as you observed,
and as you also correctly observed, autoselect can be selected
from HUBwatch.
Bob
|
1153.8 | Autoselect is not the default? | NPSS::WADE | Network Systems Support | Thu Jul 07 1994 10:30 | 13 |
| re .7
Sanity check:
What you're saying is the DB900MX does not come up in autoselect
mode and we need to be aware that this will cause problems on
customer's networks that consist of bridges running in LB200 mode.
Correct?
Bill
|
1153.9 | Autoselect is simply a necessary LAN migration feature | NACAD2::BATTERSBY | | Thu Jul 07 1994 12:46 | 17 |
| That's absolutely correct. If your customer has *any* bridges
running LB100 STP, if you don't set the DB900MX (using HUBwatch),
to Autoselect, there could possibly be more than one STP topology
on you customers extended LAN. The LB200's default to 802.1d *with*
autoselect enabled. So in a network with no LB100's they would behave
fine with the DB900MX. The problem is older DEC bridges like the LB100
which are a true epoch 1 bridge. Other vendors also have bridges which
only configure as LB100 - like spanning tree. Other vendors also have
bridges which *won't* handle LB100 STP at all, only 802.1d STP. So the
bottom line is to be aware of what your customer has for other LAN
hardware so you can best advise them as to how to set up their LAN for
maximum connectivity, flexibility, and managebility.
It's not that the DB900MX won't default to autoselect that will cause
problems, it's that there is older generation Ethernet hardware still
being used by customers which is the hassle.
Bob
|
1153.10 | Leave it in 802.1d | LEVERS::SLAWRENCE | | Mon Jul 11 1994 11:13 | 12 |
|
The problem with having the bridge autoselect, and part of the reason
why the default is to be locked to 802.1d is that (at least) the Cisco
implementation of the compatibility mode is broken in such a way that
it will cause all auto-select bridges to toggle back and forth between
modes every couple of minutes. This creates a very unstable situation
that is difficult to debug unless you've seen it before.
Be aware that the DECbrouter 90 uses Cisco code, and has this problem.
Here in Networks Engineering, we run our LAN with all production
bridges locked to 802.1d.
|
1153.11 | Point well taken on Cisco code etc. but...... | NACAD2::BATTERSBY | | Mon Jul 11 1994 14:54 | 16 |
| > Here in Networks Engineering, we run our LAN with all production
> bridges locked to 802.1d.
That's true but our extended LAN was re-built and converted to
an FDDI LAN, and all the LB100's were retired-to-that-great-LAN
-in-the-sky.
I will still maintain however, that .0 still has to be cognizant of
what his customer has for equipment in their LAN and make suggestions
on how best to configure it. *If* his customer has a very large # of
old DEC LB100's, and doesn't want to get rid of them then our newer
products have to be able to be backwards compatible. That was my
point in discussing autoselect. Having more than one spanning tree
is also something that *should* be avoided if at all possible.
Bob
|