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What are three states for RSTP? (Choose three.)

What are three states for RSTP? (Choose three.)

PrepAway - Latest Free Exam Questions & Answers

A.
discarding

B.
blocking

C.
listening

D.
learning

E.
forwarding

Explanation:
Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol Port States and Port Roles

Port Roles in RSTP

In RSTP, the port role is a variable assigned to a given port. The root port and designated port roles remain, and the blocking port role is replaced with the alternate and backup port roles. The Spanning Tree Algorithm (STA) determines the role of a port based on BPDUs.

Root Port and Root Bridge

The port closest to the root bridge in terms of least path cost (based on BPDU) is determined to be the root port. The STA elects a single root bridge in the entire bridged network of each VLAN. The root bridge sends BPDUs that have a lower bridge priority than the BPDUs that any other bridges send. The root bridge is the only bridge in the network that does not have a root port. All other bridges receive BPDUs on at least one port.

Designated Port

The designated port is the port that can send the best BPDU on the segment to which it is connected. The IEEE 802.1D bridges link different Ethernet segments to create a bridged domain. On a given segment, there can be only one path toward the root bridge. If there are two paths, there is a bridging loop in the network. All bridges connected to a given segment listen to the BPDUs of all bridges on that segment and agree on the bridge that sends the best BPDU as the designated bridge for the segment. The port on that bridge becomes the designated port for that segment.

Alternate and Backup Port

The alternate and backup port roles correspond to the blocking state of STP. A blocked port is defined as not being the designated or root port. A blocked port receives a more useful BPDU than the one it sends out on its segment. A port must receive BPDUs in order to stay blocked. For this purpose, RSTP introduces these two port roles:

An alternate port receives more useful BPDUs from another bridge and is a blocked port.
A backup port provides redundant connectivity to the same segment and cannot guarantee alternate connectivity to the root bridge.

When a port is selected by the STA to become a designated port in STP, the port still waits for two times the forward delay seconds (2 x 15 default) before it transitions to the forwarding state. In RSTP, this condition corresponds to a port with a designated role but with a blocking state that directly transitions to the forwarding state. It skips the listening and learning states, helping it converge faster than original STP.

RSTP has a backward compatibility mode in which it can fall back to STP operation on links.

The following shows the configuration statement syntax for RSTP.

** Note: The extended-system-id statement is used to specify different bridge IDs for different STP or RSTP routing instances. In MSTP, each routing instance has its own bridge ID, so the extended-system-id statement is not used.

** Note: To force RSTP to run in STP mode, include the force-version stp statement at the [edit protocols rstp] hierarchy level. Convergence time will then be the same as in original STP.


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