T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1795.1 | Don't plan or expect it to change from what I hear... | NETCAD::BATTERSBY | | Mon Dec 19 1994 11:06 | 15 |
| That's uhm "interesting", there's a whole other faction of input
that has told us to provide current product with default set to
802.1. This is current epoch bridge spanning tree algorythm, and it
makes much more sense to default to the industry spanning tree
epoch standard rather than the older DEC LB100 implementation.
The bridges can be set to autoselect mode via management, so that
in the case of sites where there are older bridges the three
HUB DECswitch bridges (DS900EF, DS900EE, PES900TX) will detect the
older epoch spanning tree mode.
There had been many discussions on the setting of this parameter,
and it was decided to default to 802.1 instead of autoselect.
Bob
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1795.2 | Trop Tard sire | PADNOM::PEYRACHE | Jean-Yves Peyrache Country Support Group France | Mon Dec 19 1994 11:44 | 15 |
|
Thanks bob but
>> The bridges can be set to autoselect mode via management, so that
>> in the case of sites where there are older bridges the three
>> HUB DECswitch bridges (DS900EF, DS900EE, PES900TX) will detect the
>> older epoch spanning tree mode.
it's sometimes too late , because bridge starting to speak STP 802.1
before any Hubwatch connection...
May be,could you add a "warning note" in release notes , i think just
few words save many networks trouble ..
Jean-Yves
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1795.3 | Installation guide does indicate 802.1 default btw.... | NETCAD::BATTERSBY | | Mon Dec 19 1994 12:41 | 10 |
| >May be,could you add a "warning note" in release notes , i think just
>few words save many networks trouble ..
That's good feedback, and I suppose it could be considered making
a mention in the next versions of the release notes. I'll forward
your suggestion to the appropriate people for putting on the table
for consideration.
regds,
bob
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1795.4 | | NETCAD::ANIL | | Mon Dec 19 1994 13:32 | 25 |
| The "autoselect" feature was a migration strategy that was meant to
help customers transition from Digital's STP to the IEEE 802.1
standard. We have reached the point where most customers are
currently running 802.1. Customer feedback indicated that they
preferred to run a standards-based algorithm, which would keep
things simple when they have a multi-vendor network.
Those that have the old LB100's do one of two things: they let things
be, and the network runs with two spanning trees - one DEC, one IEEE.
This may be unavoidable when you have a multivendor network. This
actually works, even though it is not recommended. In your case, it's
not too late to switch over to autoselect with management even though
the bridge starts using 802.1 -- the bridges will still provide
connectivity. Thereafter the whole extended LAN would be running DEC
STP as long as it was a DEC-only site. Note that even with auto-select
the bridge starts with 802.1 and then transitions to DEC when it hears
DEC hellos. (BTW, to use the right terminology I should have said
"LB100" wherever I said "DEC" above.)
If you are still concerned about this, then another alternative
is to upgrade the 100's to 150's which are capable of 802.1 STP -- I
believe this upgrade was made low-cost specifically to solve this
problem.
Anil
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1795.5 | Why always do you speak money ?? | PADNOM::PEYRACHE | Jean-Yves Peyrache Country Support Group France | Tue Dec 20 1994 08:31 | 8 |
|
Swaps proms in the LANbridge or Add an items in the documentation
that is the question
anyway thanks gentlemen
jean-yves
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1795.6 | a worse case... | NETCAD::SLAWRENCE | | Tue Dec 20 1994 09:12 | 13 |
|
Another important factor in this decision is the fact that the Cisco
implementation of LB100 spanning tree is incomplete - it does not
support the RBMS that DECs autoselect depends upon; if an autoselect
bridge is in a network with a Cisco device (including the
DECbrouter90s) that are configured to do LB100 bridging, then the
autoselect briges (all of them) will constantly toggle between IEEE and
LB100. This is much worse than having two spanning trees (which
actually works). We had regular network problems here in engineering
when our bridges were in autoselect because someone would plug in a
DECbrouter and the network would just continuously thrash (it drove the
DECbridge90s crazy).
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1795.7 | ....Going to bat for the Doc writers :-) | NETCAD::BATTERSBY | | Tue Dec 20 1994 10:07 | 19 |
| >Swaps proms in the LANbridge or Add an items in the documentation
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Jean-Yves, just for the record, if you look at the installation
guides for all three bridges (oops er, switches) :-) that is
the DECswitch 900EF, DECswitch 900EE, and PEswitch 900TX, you will
notice that on page 2 under the bullet for "Spanning tree loop
detection protocol", it does in fact mention that the IEEE 802.1d
spanning tree protocol is the default for all three bridge products.
The installation documentation does get significant attention
during the development cycle of a product, and *is* (it really is)
written for the customer to read without expending too much effort.
So irregardless whether we are talking about a TV set, stereo, car,
or even software installed, there are those manuals or files which
usually say "readme". That's usually a hint that there is an implied
benefit for the new user of the equipment to "read me first if you
want to avoid problems due to unfamiliarity with said product".
Bob
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1795.8 | STP is NOT generally understood by MCS, or Customeers. | MSDOA::REED | John Reed @CBO, (803) 781-9571 NIS Networker | Tue Dec 20 1994 10:22 | 41 |
|
I just finished repairing a project (over $2M US) which had several
DECnis, over 30 TransLANs, DECbridge900mx's, ten to fifteen
DECbridge90's, and twenty or more DECbrouter90's. It was a spanning
tree nightmare. Each time a Disco was programmed, it would
automatically switch itself to "DEC Mode", if not specifically told
IEEE. The TransLANs would find the DEC address and lock on it, and the
DECnis would toggle, and the 900mx's as the root would pause the FDDI,
and cause a cluster state transition, bringing down over 3000
All-in-one users....
I locked the DECNII into IEEE mode, I locked the DECbridge900 into IEEE
mode, and there is no way to lock a TransLAN. So I had multiple
spanning trees. We had to telnet to each Disco (if it stayed up long
enough) to reprogram them all... I stayed up ALL NIGHT several days in
a row to try to get all of these bridges doing what I wanted, and
needed to use six different management tools. (DECmcc, Vitalink
Consoles, Telnet, Hubwatch, IRIS and NCL...) What a mixture.
Don't underestimate how FATAL a spanning tree problem can be on your
network. I had cluster satellite LAVC nodes that wouldn't boot for
days, until the spanning tree converged. Once it starts flipping, you
have to go to each bridge, and try to determine the "LB100 being
polled", and change it. IRIS really helped me alot, seeing the actual
spanning tree messages on the cable, I could count (sometimes up to
five) the number or spanning tree roots, and where they were in
hops from the designated bridge.
The DECnis console program does not have a way to specifically call out
which spanning tree to use, so you have to edit the EXTRA NCL command
files, to add your own boot commands, and the sentence to force IEEE is
a long one. but without it, the DECnis will not join the IEEE tree,
cause the DECbrouter 90's below could be in DEC mode, out of the box.
I would have liked to be able to lock the spanning tree into DEC, IEEE
or AUTO. Not just IEEE or AUTO. It cost me several nights of sleep,
and my customer several months of unhappy users until I was called in
to find out why their cluster kept crashing, and leased lines were
dropping out...
JR
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1795.9 | ne nous fachons pas .... | PADNOM::PEYRACHE | Jean-Yves Peyrache Country Support Group France | Wed Dec 21 1994 06:03 | 8 |
|
Thanks all,
i agree with all replies/comments,but referring many lans here
with old lanbridge stuff products autoselect mode should be better than
802.1.
Jean-yves
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