MSTP/4/PROEDGE_PORT_CHANGED: After the edge port receives a BPDU packet, the port is no longer an edge port. (ProcessID=[ProcessID], InstanceID=[InstanceID], PortID1=[PortID1], PortID2=[PortID2], PortID3=[PortID3], PortID4=[PortID4], PortIDFlag=[PortIDFlag], PortState=[PortState], IfIndex=[IfIndex], PortName=[PortName], PwName=[PwName])
Parameter Name | Parameter Meaning |
---|---|
ProcessID |
Indicates the MSTP process ID. |
InstanceID |
Indicates the instance ID. |
PortID1 |
Indicates ID 1 of the port in the MSTP process. |
PortID2 |
Indicates ID 2 of the port in the MSTP process. |
PortID3 |
Indicates ID 3 of the port in the MSTP process. |
PortID4 |
Indicates ID 4 of the port in the MSTP process. |
PortIDFlag |
Indicates the port flag. |
PortState |
Indicates the port state. |
IfIndex |
Indicates the interface index. |
PortName |
Indicates the port name. |
PwName |
Indicates the PW name. |
1. Check whether the interface is directly connected to a user terminal and can be specified as an edge port.
2. Locate the source of the BPDUs on the interface and check whether the malicious attack exists.
3. Run the undo stp edged-port command and the undo shutdown command in the interface view to delete the configuration of the edge port and restart the interface. Then, check whether the alarm is cleared. If the alarm persists, go to Step 4.
4. Collect alarm information and configuration information, and then contact technical support personnel.