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09-26-2014 07:14 AM
09-26-2014 07:14 AM
Spanning Tree Issue
We had a loop created recently that caused more switches to go down than I expected. A desktop switch was plugged into itself which I traced back to the IDF and was plugged into a 2650 at the bottom of the rack. All five switches in the IDF went down when the loop was created. I checked the logs and the uplink fiber port was blocked by STP which goes back to a 4108 series switch in the MDF whichi then connects to the .1 top level switch in the MDF which is a 5406zl. The top level switch (.1) has a STP priority of 0 whereas all other switches have a priority of 8. Is this what should have happened with STP or do I need to edit the configs?
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09-28-2014 10:00 PM
09-28-2014 10:00 PM
Re: Spanning Tree Issue
What is "A desktop switch"?
No, STP should never take down a whole rack of switches.
No, if you have 4 layers of switches, then your STP topology should be designed with 4 different STP priorities, in ascending order out from your Core switch.
All STP does is block local links to prevent loops. If your "desktop switch" didn't block the loop, then that is where your problem lies.
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09-29-2014 06:26 AM
09-29-2014 06:26 AM
Re: Spanning Tree Issue
Thanks for the reply. By desktop switch, I mean a five port unmanaged switch. We don't have redundant links between the four switches in the rack. I know we could use BPDU protection to prevent unautorized switches from getting plugged into the network, but they are unfortunatey necessary in our environment. Are redundant links required for propper spanning-tree population?
Thank you again.
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09-29-2014 01:22 PM
09-29-2014 01:22 PM
Re: Spanning Tree Issue
You need to configure storm control on your uplinks to the unmanaged switch. Or some kind of rate limiting for broadcast traffic.