From: Joel Desaulniers (joeldesaulniers@gmail.com)
Date: Fri Apr 07 2006 - 03:29:46 GMT-3
Hi Nick,
I think you can use any combination of timers as long as you come up to
30 seconds, as long as you stay within the confines of the timers. For
example, you can have:
spanning-tree vlan 1 forward-time 5 <--- 4 to 30 seconds
spanning-tree vlan 1 max-age 20 <--- 6 to 40 seconds
I believe the default for max-age is 20 seconds, so setting this value
makes no difference.
Joel Desaulniers
Network Analyst
CCNP, CCNA
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Nick Griffin
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 8:20 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Forwarding Timers
When your asked to configure a port to allow it to go from blocking to
forwarding state in say 30 seconds. You can go ahead and configure
"spanning-tree vlan 1 forward-time 15" to force the switch to wait 15
seconds in the listening state and 15 seconds in the learning state, and
then forward. However, it is my understanding that you should also be
configuring the max age as well. So in this scenario, is the right
solution "spanning-tree vlan 1 forward-time 10" and spanning-tree vlan 1
max-age 10" the correct solution, to assure blocking to forwarding in 30
seconds, in the worst case scenario? Hope this makes sense, thoughts are
appreciated.
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