108
C
HAPTER
10: L
INK
A
GGREGATION
C
ONFIGURATION
Link Aggregation
Classification
Depending on different aggregation modes, the following three types of link
aggregation exist:
■
Manual aggregation
■
Static LACP aggregation
■
Dynamic LACP aggregation
Manual Aggregation
Group
Introduction to manual aggregation group
A manual aggregation group is manually created. All its member ports are
manually added and can be manually removed (it inhibits the system from
automatically adding/removing ports to/from it). Each manual aggregation group
must contain at least one port. When a manual aggregation group contains only
one port, you cannot remove the port unless you remove the whole aggregation
group.
LACP is disabled on the member ports of manual aggregation groups, and you
cannot enable LACP on ports in a manual aggregation group.
Port status in manual aggregation group
A port in a manual aggregation group can be in one of the two states: selected or
unselected. In a manual aggregation group, only the selected ports can forward
user service packets.
In a manual aggregation group, the system sets the ports to selected or unselected
state according to the following rules.
■
Among the ports in an aggregation group that are in up state, the system
determines the mater port with one of the following settings being the highest
(in descending order) as the master port: full duplex/high speed, full duplex/low
speed, half duplex/high speed, half duplex/low speed. The ports with their rate,
duplex mode and link type being the same as that of the master port are
selected ports, and the rest are unselected ports.
■
The system sets the ports unable to aggregate with the master port (due to
some hardware limit) to unselected state.
■
There is a limit on the number of selected ports in an aggregation group.
Therefore, if the number of the selected ports in an aggregation group exceeds
the maximum number supported by the device, those with lower port numbers
operate as the selected ports, and others as unselected ports.
Among the selected ports in an aggregation group, the one with smallest port
number operates as the master port. Other selected ports are the member ports.
Requirements on ports for manual aggregation
Generally, there is no limit on the rate and duplex mode of the ports (also
including initially down port) you want to add to a manual aggregation group.
Static LACP Aggregation
Group
Introduction to static LACP aggregation
A static LACP aggregation group is also manually created. All its member ports are
manually added and can be manually removed (it inhibits the system from
automatically adding/removing ports to/from it). Each static aggregation group
Summary of Contents for Switch 4210 9-Port
Page 22: ...20 CHAPTER 1 CLI CONFIGURATION ...
Page 74: ...72 CHAPTER 3 CONFIGURATION FILE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 84: ...82 CHAPTER 5 VLAN CONFIGURATION ...
Page 96: ...94 CHAPTER 8 IP PERFORMANCE CONFIGURATION ...
Page 108: ...106 CHAPTER 9 PORT BASIC CONFIGURATION ...
Page 122: ...120 CHAPTER 11 PORT ISOLATION CONFIGURATION ...
Page 140: ...138 CHAPTER 13 MAC ADDRESS TABLE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 234: ...232 CHAPTER 17 802 1X CONFIGURATION ...
Page 246: ...244 CHAPTER 20 AAA OVERVIEW ...
Page 270: ...268 CHAPTER 21 AAA CONFIGURATION ...
Page 292: ...290 CHAPTER 26 DHCP BOOTP CLIENT CONFIGURATION ...
Page 318: ...316 CHAPTER 29 MIRRORING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 340: ...338 CHAPTER 30 CLUSTER ...
Page 362: ...360 CHAPTER 33 SNMP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 368: ...366 CHAPTER 34 RMON CONFIGURATION ...
Page 450: ...448 CHAPTER 39 TFTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 451: ......
Page 452: ...450 CHAPTER 39 TFTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 470: ...468 CHAPTER 40 INFORMATION CENTER ...
Page 496: ...494 CHAPTER 44 DEVICE MANAGEMENT ...