The statement is false. In Parallel Redundancy Protocol, LAN A and LAN B must remain two separate, failure-independent networks. A PRP RedBox connects a singly attached node or conventional network to both parallel LANs and behaves toward the PRP network like a doubly attached node. It duplicates outgoing frames and transmits one copy through each PRP port. For incoming traffic, it accepts the first valid copy and discards the later duplicate before forwarding the frame through its interlink port.
The RedBox must not operate as a normal bridge that directly forwards frames from its LAN A port to its LAN B port. Doing so would connect the two redundant LANs, potentially creating loops, duplicate propagation, broadcast amplification, and a common failure path. That would defeat the fundamental PRP requirement that failure or disruption in one LAN must not affect the other.
The original video contains the typing error “PPR RedBox”; the correct term is PRP RedBox , meaning Parallel Redundancy Protocol Redundancy Box. PRP topology requires two separate networks with no direct links between them, while the RedBox provides controlled redundant attachment for non-PRP devices.
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