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Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Software Configuration Guide
OL-12247-04
Chapter 5 Managing Switch Stacks
Understanding Switch Stacks
When a new, out-of-box switch joins a switch stack, it uses the system-level settings of that switch stack.
If a switch is moved to a different switch stack, that switch loses its saved configuration file and uses the
system-level configuration of the new switch stack.
The interface-specific configuration of each stack member is associated with the stack member number.
As mentioned in the
“Stack Member Numbers” section on page 5-8
, stack members retain their numbers
unless they are manually changed or they are already used by another member in the same switch stack.
•
If an interface-specific configuration does not exist for that member number, the stack member uses
its default interface-specific configuration.
•
If an interface-specific configuration exists for that member number, the stack member uses the
interface-specific configuration associated with that member number.
If a stack member fails and you replace with it with an identical model, the replacement switch
automatically uses the same interface-specific configuration as the failed switch. Hence, you do not need
to reconfigure the interface settings. The replacement switch must have the same stack member number
as the failed switch. For information about the benefits of provisioning a switch stack, see the
Stack Offline Configuration” section on page 5-9
.
You back up and restore the stack configuration in the same way as you would for a standalone switch
configuration. For more information about file systems and configuration files, see
“Working with the Cisco IOS File System, Configuration Files, and Software Images.”
Additional Considerations for System-Wide Configuration on Switch Stacks
These sections provide additional considerations for configuring system-wide features on switch stacks:
•
“Planning and Creating Clusters” chapter in the
Getting Started with Cisco Network Assistant
,
available on Cisco.com
•
“MAC Addresses and Switch Stacks” section on page 6-21
•
“Setting the SDM Template” section on page 8-5
•
“802.1x Authentication and Switch Stacks” section on page 9-12
•
“VTP and Switch Stacks” section on page 14-8
•
“Private VLANs and Switch Stacks” section on page 16-5
•
“Spanning Tree and Switch Stacks” section on page 18-12
•
“MSTP and Switch Stacks” section on page 19-8
•
“DHCP Snooping and Switch Stacks” section on page 22-7
•
“IGMP Snooping and Switch Stacks” section on page 24-7
•
“Port Security and Switch Stacks” section on page 26-18
•
“CDP and Switch Stacks” section on page 27-2
•
“SPAN and RSPAN and Switch Stacks” section on page 30-10
•
“ACLs and Switch Stacks” section on page 34-6
•