AT-GS950/24 Web Interface User Guide
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Network equipment vendors tend to employ different techniques to
implement static trunks. Consequently, a static trunk on one device may
be incompatible with the same feature on a device from a different
manufacturer. For this reason static trunks are typically employed only
between devices from the same vendor. That is not to say that an Allied
Telesis Layer 2 managed switch cannot form a static trunk with a device
from another manufacturer; however, the implementations of static
trunking on the two devices may be incompatible.
Also, note that a static trunk does not provide for redundancy or link
backup. If a port in a static trunk loses its link, the trunk’s total bandwidth is
diminished. Although the traffic carried by the lost link is shifted to one of
the remaining ports in the trunk, the bandwidth remains reduced until the
lost link is re-established or you reconfigure the trunk by adding another
port to it.
General Guidelines
Following are the guidelines for creating a static trunk:
Allied Telesis recommends setting static port trunks between Allied
Telesis networking devices to ensure compatibility.
A static trunk can contain up to eight ports.
The ports of a static trunk must be of the same medium type. They
can be all twisted-pair ports or all fiber optic ports, but not a
combination of the two.
The ports of a trunk can be either consecutive (for example, Ports
2 through 4) or nonconsecutive (for example, ports 3, 5, and 7).
Before creating a port trunk, verify that the settings are the same
for all ports in the trunk including speed (1000/Full), duplex mode,
flow control, back pressure settings and VLAN membership. If
these settings are not the same, then the switch does not allow you
to create the trunk.
Note
When a trunk group is formed with only combo ports as members, all
port members are configured to the forced port mode at 1000/Full.
The trunk ports on the connecting network switch should also be
configured for 1000/Full to insure speed and duplex compatibility
between the switches.
After you have created a port trunk, a change to the speed, duplex
mode, flow control, or back pressure of any port in the trunk
automatically implements the same change on all the other
member ports.
A port can belong to only one static trunk at a time.
The ports of a static trunk can be configured to be members of
Summary of Contents for AT-GS950/24
Page 12: ...Figures 12 ...
Page 14: ...List of Tables 14 ...
Page 18: ...Preface 18 ...
Page 60: ...Chapter 2 Basic Switch Configuration 60 ...
Page 68: ...Chapter 3 Port Configuration 68 ...
Page 74: ...Chapter 4 Port Mirroring 74 ...
Page 94: ...Chapter 5 Virtual LANs 94 ...
Page 102: ...Chapter 6 GVRP 102 ...
Page 132: ...Chapter 8 STP and RSTP 132 ...
Page 146: ...Chapter 9 Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol 146 ...
Page 156: ...Chapter 10 Static Port Trunking 156 ...
Page 178: ...Chapter 12 Quality of Service CoS 178 ...
Page 206: ...Chapter 13 Access Control Configuration 206 ...
Page 226: ...Chapter 15 MAC Address Table 226 ...
Page 238: ...Chapter 16 DHCP Snooping 238 ...
Page 244: ...Chapter 17 IGMP Snooping 244 ...
Page 288: ...Chapter 21 Simple Network Management Protocol SNMPv3 288 ...
Page 300: ...Chapter 22 RMON 300 ...
Page 322: ...Chapter 24 Management Software Updates 322 ...
Page 348: ...Appendix A MSTP Overview 348 ...
Page 366: ...Appendix A AT GS950 24 Default Parameters 366 ...