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Member ports of a LAG are added and programmed into the hardware in a predictable order based on the port ID, instead of in the
order in which the ports come up. With this implementation, load balancing yields predictable results across line card resets and
chassis reloads.
A physical interface can belong to only one port channel at a time.
Each port channel must contain interfaces of the same interface type/speed.
Port channels can contain a mix of 1G/10G/40G. The interface speed (10, 100, or 1000 Mbps) the port channel uses is determined
by the first port channel member that is physically up. Dell Networking OS disables the interfaces that do match the interface speed
that the first channel member sets. That first interface may be the first interface that is physically brought up or was physically
operating when interfaces were added to the port channel. For example, if the first operational interface in the port channel is a
Gigabit Ethernet interface, all interfaces at 1000 Mbps are kept up, and all 10/100/1000 interfaces that are not set to 1000 speed or
auto negotiate are disabled.
Dell Networking OS brings up the interfaces interfaces that are set to auto negotiate so that their speed is identical to the speed of
the first channel member in the port channel.
Interfaces in Port Channels
When 10/40 Gbps interfaces are added to a port channel, the interfaces must share a common speed. When interfaces have a
configured speed different from the port channel speed, the software disables those interfaces.
The common speed is determined when the port channel is first enabled. At that time, the software checks the first interface listed
in the port channel configuration. If you enabled that interface, its speed configuration becomes the common speed of the port
channel. If the other interfaces configured in that port channel are configured with a different speed, Dell Networking OS disables
them.
Configuration Tasks for Port Channel Interfaces
To configure a port channel (LAG), use the commands similar to those found in physical interfaces. By default, no port channels are
configured in the startup configuration.
These are the mandatory and optional configuration tasks:
•
(mandatory)
•
Adding a Physical Interface to a Port Channel
(mandatory)
•
Reassigning an Interface to a New Port Channel
(optional)
•
Configuring the Minimum Oper Up Links in a Port Channel
(optional)
•
Adding or Removing a Port Channel from a VLAN
(optional)
•
Assigning an IP Address to a Port Channel
(optional)
•
Deleting or Disabling a Port Channel
(optional)
•
Load Balancing Through Port Channels
(optional)
Creating a Port Channel
You can create up to 128 port channels with up to 16 port members per group on the platform.
To configure a port channel, use the following commands.
1.
Create a port channel.
CONFIGURATION mode
interface port-channel
id-number
2.
Ensure that the port channel is active.
INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode
no shutdown
378
Interfaces
Summary of Contents for S4048-ON
Page 1: ...Dell Configuration Guide for the S4048 ON System 9 9 0 0 ...
Page 146: ...Figure 14 BFD Three Way Handshake State Changes 146 Bidirectional Forwarding Detection BFD ...
Page 522: ...Figure 87 Configuring Interfaces for MSDP 522 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP ...
Page 523: ...Figure 88 Configuring OSPF and BGP for MSDP Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP 523 ...
Page 528: ...Figure 91 MSDP Default Peer Scenario 1 528 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP ...
Page 529: ...Figure 92 MSDP Default Peer Scenario 2 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP 529 ...
Page 530: ...Figure 93 MSDP Default Peer Scenario 3 530 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP ...
Page 633: ...Policy based Routing PBR 633 ...
Page 777: ...Figure 119 Single and Double Tag TPID Match Service Provider Bridging 777 ...
Page 778: ...Figure 120 Single and Double Tag First byte TPID Match 778 Service Provider Bridging ...