Root - A forwarding port that is the best port from Nonroot-bridge to Rootbridge
Designated - A forwarding port for every LAN segment
Alternate - An alternate path to the root bridge. This path is different than using the root port.
Backup - A backup/redundant path to a segment where another bridge port already connects.
Disabled - Not strictly part of STP, a network administrator can manually disable a port
Alternate - An alternate path to the root bridge. This path is different than using the root port.
Backup - A backup/redundant path to a segment where another bridge port already connects.
Disabled - Not strictly part of STP, a network administrator can manually disable a port
RSTP is a refinement of STP and therefore shares most of its basic operation characteristics. However there are some notable differences as summarized below:
Detection of root switch failure is done in 3 hello times, which is 6 seconds if default hello times have not been changed.
Ports may be configured as edge ports if they are attached to a LAN that has no other bridges attached. These edge ports transition directly to the forwarding state. RSTP still continues to monitor the port for BPDUs in case a bridge is connected. RSTP can also be configured to automatically detect edge ports. As soon as the bridge detects a BPDU coming to an edge port, the port becomes a non-edge port.
Unlike in STP, RSTP will respond to BPDUs sent from the direction of the root bridge. An RSTP bridge will "propose" its spanning tree information to its designated ports. If another RSTP bridge receives this information and determines this is the superior root information, it sets all its other ports to discarding. The bridge may send an "agreement" to the first bridge confirming its superior spanning tree information. The first bridge, upon receiving this agreement, knows it can rapidly transition that port to the forwarding state bypassing the traditional listening/learning state transition. This essentially creates a cascading effect away from the root bridge where each designated bridge proposes to its neighbors to determine if it can make a rapid transition. This is one of the major elements that allows RSTP to achieve faster convergence times than STP.
As discussed in the port role details above, RSTP maintains backup details regarding the discarding status of ports. This avoids timeouts if the current forwarding ports were to fail or BPDUs were not received on the root port in a certain interval.