1-30 
Configuring Leaf Nodes 
Configuring the MST Region 
Refer to Configuring an MST Region. 
Configuring How a Port Recognizes and Sends MSTP Packets 
Refer to Configuring How a Port Recognizes and Sends MSTP Packets. 
Configuring the Timeout Time Factor 
Refer to Configuring the Timeout Time Factor. 
Configuring the Maximum Transmitting Rate on the Current Port 
Refer to Configuring the Maximum Transmitting Rate on the Current Port. 
Configuring a Port as an Edge Port 
Refer to Configuring the Current Port as an Edge Port. 
Configuring the Path Cost for a Port 
The path cost parameter reflects the rate of the link connected to the port. For a port on an 
MSTP-enabled switch, the path cost may be different in different MSTIs. You can enable flows of 
different VLANs to travel along different physical links by configuring appropriate path costs on ports, so 
that VLAN-based load balancing can be implemented. 
Path cost of a port can be determined by the switch or through manual configuration. 
Standards for calculating path costs of ports 
Currently, a switch can calculate the path costs of ports based on one of the following standards: 
z  dot1d-1998: Adopts the IEEE 802.1D-1998 standard to calculate the default path costs of ports. 
z  dot1t: Adopts the IEEE 802.1t standard to calculate the default path costs of ports. 
z  legacy: Adopts the proprietary standard to calculate the default path costs of ports. 
Follow these steps to specify the standard for calculating path costs: 
To do...  Use the command...  Remarks 
Enter system view 
system-view 
— 
Specify the standard for 
calculating the default path 
costs of the links connected to 
the ports of the switch 
stp pathcost-standard 
{ dot1d-1998 | dot1t | legacy }
Optional 
By default, the legacy standard 
is used to calculate the default 
path costs of ports. 
 
Table 1-7 Transmission rates vs. path costs 
Rate 
Operation mode 
(half-/full-duplex) 
802.1D-1998  IEEE 802.1t 
Latency 
standard  
0 —  65,535 200,000,000 200,000