with a hub and spoke topology that we have at work, is root guard still needed/worth it ...?? seems like root guard is only necessary if you have daisy-chained switches.
Higher priority means that it will not become the new root switch. The port will forward and the switch will participate in the network. If you mean that switch D has a lower priority than switch A then the port on switch C will go into a "root-inconsistent" state and it will not forward. The port will effectively be down.
nice ..and easy to understand
Neat explanation, thank you!👍
Thanks for your explaination
It's a pretty easy one .
very well explained thanks a lot
you have such a calm voice.
very informative, Great video!
with a hub and spoke topology that we have at work, is root guard still needed/worth it ...?? seems like root guard is only necessary if you have daisy-chained switches.
Very cool !
Can i configure both on access port instead?
root guard enable on switch C, If the Switch D has higher priority than switch A. at that time Switch C port down or up? give answer.
Higher priority means that it will not become the new root switch. The port will forward and the switch will participate in the network.
If you mean that switch D has a lower priority than switch A then the port on switch C will go into a "root-inconsistent" state and it will not forward. The port will effectively be down.