10-05-2019 08:37 AM
I'm just trying to review my course material for one of my university classes and one think that I don't quite understand is the difference between alternate and backup ports. I have a topology that I am looking at and trying to practice on and after an hour of trying to find some answers I'm still coming up short and don't understand. A lot of the diagrams I've seen are simple enough to understand and don't teach me anything.
I've already started labelling the topology but I was hoping someone could tell me what roles all of the unlabelled ports be given and why? Assuming all links between switches to be 100Mbps links. Any help is greatly appreciated.
10-05-2019 09:01 AM
10-05-2019 10:41 AM
Hi,
Let's check the definition of the Backup port and Alternate Port.
Alternate Port: In Simple Words, the alternate port is used as an alternate path up to the root bridge. In this Diagram Port between S2 to S3 and S2 to S4 point to point links are alternate links.
Backup Port: Cisco has created this backup port for the function of supporting connectivity between switches that have some form of an unsupported spanning-tree device between them. Note, that the backup port is hardly ever seen in real-life production networks because it’s only used where a switch has multiple links to the same layer 1 segment (i.e. multiple ports in the same collision domain), which can only really be apparent when using something like a hub. In the mentioned diagram there is no backup port.
I think this CCIE blog will help you more to understand the same in more details: https://ccieblog.co.uk/spanning-tree/rstp-alternate-and-backup-ports
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