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Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Software Configuration Guide
OL-12247-04
Chapter 1 Overview
Features
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Cisco Network Assistant (referred to as
Network Assistant
) for
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Managing communities, which are device groups like clusters, except that they can contain
routers and access points and can be made more secure.
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Simplifying and minimizing switch and switch stack management from anywhere in your
intranet.
–
Accomplishing multiple configuration tasks from a single graphical interface without needing
to remember command-line interface (CLI) commands to accomplish specific tasks.
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Interactive guide mode that guides you in configuring complex features such as VLANs, ACLs,
and quality of service (QoS).
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Configuration wizards that prompt you to provide only the minimum required information to
configure complex features such as QoS priorities for video traffic, priority levels for data
applications, and security.
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Downloading an image to a switch.
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Applying actions to multiple ports and multiple switches at the same time, such as VLAN and
QoS settings, inventory and statistic reports, link- and switch-level monitoring and
troubleshooting, and multiple switch software upgrades.
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Viewing a topology of interconnected devices to identify existing switch clusters and eligible
switches that can join a cluster and to identify link information between switches.
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Monitoring real-time status of a switch or multiple switches from the LEDs on the front-panel
images. The system and port LED colors on the images are similar to those used on the physical
LEDs.
•
Cisco StackWise Plus technology on stacking-capable switches for
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Connecting up to nine switches through their StackWise Plus ports that operate as a single
switch or switch-router in the network.
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Creating a bidirectional 32-Gb/s switching fabric across the switch stack, with all stack
members having full access to the system bandwidth.
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Using a single IP address and configuration file to manage the entire switch stack.
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Automatic Cisco IOS version-check of new stack members with the option to automatically load
images from the stack master or from a TFTP server.
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Adding, removing, and replacing switches in the stack without disrupting the operation of the
stack.
–
Provisioning a new member for a switch stack with the offline configuration feature. You can
configure in advance the interface configuration for a specific stack member number and for a
specific switch type of a new switch that is not part of the stack. The switch stack retains this
information across stack reloads whether or not the provisioned switch is part of the stack.
–
Displaying stack-ring activity statistics (the number of frames sent by each stack member to the
ring).
•
Stack troubleshooting enhancements