10-23-2012 08:25 AM - edited 03-07-2019 09:38 AM
3560 command reference says valid priority values are 4096, 8192, ... however I tried "spanning-tree vlan priority 0" and the command was accepted. When I "show spanning-tree brief", the vlan I configured did show priority 0.
Did I read the command reference right? (I looked at 12.2(44) and 12.2(52)
Is "priority 0" a valid configuration even if IOS accepts it?
Thanks
Solved! Go to Solution.
10-23-2012 08:50 AM
Good morning gwhuang5398
My name is Johnnatan and I am part of the Small business Support community. This is a valid value for this command, actually has more priority than 4096. The priority order starts from 0 and then increases in 4096.
0, 4096, 8192, 12288, …
If you configure two switches one of them with priority ¨0¨ and the other one with priority ¨4096¨, the first one with priority ¨0¨ is going to be the root.
I hope you find this answer useful, if it was satisfactory for you, please mark the question as Answered.
Thank you.
Johnnatan Rodriguez Miranda.
Cisco Network Support Engineer.
10-23-2012 08:50 AM
Good morning gwhuang5398
My name is Johnnatan and I am part of the Small business Support community. This is a valid value for this command, actually has more priority than 4096. The priority order starts from 0 and then increases in 4096.
0, 4096, 8192, 12288, …
If you configure two switches one of them with priority ¨0¨ and the other one with priority ¨4096¨, the first one with priority ¨0¨ is going to be the root.
I hope you find this answer useful, if it was satisfactory for you, please mark the question as Answered.
Thank you.
Johnnatan Rodriguez Miranda.
Cisco Network Support Engineer.
12-19-2021 05:43 AM
Hi Jonatrod,
when two switches are set with "priority 0" the first, and "root primary" the second,
which will become root-bridge? Some say the second, most say the first.
IMHO, if I'm not wrong, the second Switch generates a Syslog complaining it can't
grant to become root-bridge, because of the presence in the network of the
"priority 0" Switch (it cannot set himself 4096 below).
So I think the two switches will set both to "priority 0", and tie break on their MAC...
The lowest MAC generates a lowest BID, and this will decide the root-bridge. Isn't it?
04-12-2023 10:31 AM
04-14-2023 06:04 AM
When you issue the "root primary" command, this switch tries to become the switch with a priority lower than the current lowest priority
as it cannot execute this command, the active priority most likely remains unchanged (not changed to "0")
and the current switch with priority "0" remains root
04-14-2023 06:23 AM
02-15-2024 01:27 AM
It is indeed true if two switches are set to "priority 0" the root-bridge choice depends on the MAC address value. The one having the lowest will be chosen.
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