I am working with support on an issue where randomly we have a network interruption that looks like it's caused by some aggregate ports on our MS425 going down and back up and causing spanning tree topology change. The MS425 is the core switch stack. Anyway, looking in the event log I see this a lot on all of our access ports on our MS350's. This is just a normal port connected to a desktop computer. This happens every time a computer is turned on. Is it normal for that to be logged as a STP change? I assume it's normal just wanted to make sure.
Here is an example:
Here is the config from that port.
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Oh, sorry, I misunderstood the question. Yes, they are normal.
https://community.meraki.com/t5/Switching/STP-guard-setup-best-practices/m-p/31165#M2628
Hope it helps.
Hey @jwwork ,
In RSTP, a Topology Change (TC) is generated when a non-edge port moves into the forwarding state. It's for this reason it's important to put BPDU Guard on your host facing ports as that marks them as "edge" so a flap won't generate a TC.
I know, in the screenshot you can see that I have BPDU guard enabled on this port like I do all my access ports. Just curious if the STP messages in the log are normal.
Oh, sorry, I misunderstood the question. Yes, they are normal.
Thank you! Is there a different message that is logged when there is actually a topology change?