Compare cert salaries and plan your next career move
iamme4eva wrote: » In a stable network where MAC tables are fully populated, then unicast traffic would go directly to the destination. However, broadcast traffic, ARP request, etc all broadcast out of all ports. This means that the frame exists in multiple locations, and will go round and round the network.
i just want to know this that when a packet is flooded in the network it goes to his destination as well so after that loop should be finished....
blatini wrote: » Can you manually configure the root switch, or is that always determined by the Bridge ID -> MAC address deduction?
Also a lot of diagrams I've been viewing with STP have the Designated Ports always on the root switch. Which makes sense. Is there a scenario where the designated ports wouldn't be there?
NetworkVeteran wrote: » Just about every switch in your network should have designated ports!
NetworkVeteran wrote: » As imme4eva says, you can choose the root by setting the priority, and often you want to do so. Just about every switch in your network should have designated ports! At this point, you'd be well-served by either reading a chapter on spanning tree or attempting to setup a simple lab topology with a few hosts.
blatini wrote: » Well, yeah... I am aware each switch has one port that is set to forwarding. I was getting confused in the terminology. It appears designated ports are on the root switch and the non-root switches each have one root port. Or maybe it is the other way around. Just different ways of saying the same thing it seems...
Compare salaries for top cybersecurity certifications. Free download for TechExams community.