Cisco Systems NME-16ES-1G manual Switch Stack Switch Cluster

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Cisco EtherSwitch Service Modules Feature Guide

Information About the Cisco EtherSwitch Service Modules

Table 1

Basic Comparison of Switch Stacks and Switch Clusters (continued)

 

 

 

Switch Stack

 

Switch Cluster

 

 

A switch stack can be a cluster command switch or a cluster

A switch cluster cannot be a stack master or stack member.

member switch.

 

 

 

 

The stack master is the single point of complete management

The cluster command switch is the single point of some

for all stack members in a particular switch stack.

management for all cluster members in a particular switch

 

 

cluster.

 

 

The backup stack master is automatically determined in case

The standby cluster command switch must be preassigned in

the stack master fails.

case the cluster command switch fails.

 

 

A switch stack supports up to 8 simultaneous stack master

A switch cluster supports only 1 cluster command switch

failures.

 

failure at a time.

 

 

Stack members (as a switch stack) behave and are presented

Cluster members are various, independent switches that are

as a single, unified system in the network.

not managed as and do not behave as a unified system.

 

 

Management of stack members is integrated through a single

Cluster members have separate, individual configuration files.

configuration file.

 

 

 

Stack- and interface-level configurations are stored on each

Cluster configuration are stored on the cluster command

stack member.

 

switch and the standby cluster command switch.

 

 

New stack members are automatically added to the switch

New cluster members must be manually added to the switch

stack.

 

cluster.

 

 

 

Recall that stack members work together to behave as a unified system (as a single switch stack) in the network and are presented to the network as such by Layer 2 and Layer 3 protocols. Therefore, the switch cluster recognizes switch stacks, not individual stack members, as eligible cluster members. Individual stack members cannot join a switch cluster or participate as separate cluster members. Because a switch cluster must have 1 cluster command switch and can have up to 15 cluster members, a cluster can potentially have up to 16 switch stacks, totalling 144 devices.

Cluster configuration of switch stacks is through the stack master.

Note From Network Assistant or the CLI, you can configure a switch cluster to contain up to 16 switch stacks. However, from Network Assistant, the maximum number of actual devices in a switch cluster is 16, irrespective of the number of devices in switch stack cluster members. For example, if a switch stack contains three stack members, they are counted as three separate devices.

If you used the CLI to configure a switch cluster that contains more than 16 actual devices and then try to display the cluster from Network Assistant. Network Assistant requires you to remove cluster members until the Network Assistant limit of 16 is reached.

These are considerations to keep in mind when you have switch stacks in switch clusters:

If the cluster command switch is not a Cisco EtherSwitch service module or switch stack and a new stack master is elected in a cluster member switch stack, the switch stack loses its connectivity to the switch cluster if there are no redundant connections between the switch stack and the cluster command switch. You must add the switch stack to the switch cluster.

Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)SEC

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Contents Guide Release ModificationContents Network Modules Hardware Installation Guide Hardware OverviewSoftware Features and Benefits Ease-of-Use and Ease-of-Deployment Features Performance FeaturesManagement Options Manageability Features Availability FeaturesVlan Features Security Features QoS and CoS Features Power-over-Ethernet Features Monitoring FeaturesOverview of Switch Stacks Cisco StackWise ConceptsSwitch Stack Membership Stack Master Election and Re-Election Switch Stack Bridge ID and Router MAC Address Stack Member NumbersStack Member Priority Values Switch Stack Software Compatibility Recommendations Stack Protocol Version CompatibilitySwitch Stack Configuration Files Switch Stack Management Connectivity Management Connectivity to Specific Stack Members Accessing the CLI of a Specific Stack MemberClustering Concepts Cluster Compatibility Command Device CharacteristicsStandby Command Device Characteristics Discovery of Candidates and Members Through CDP Hops Candidate and Member CharacteristicsAutomatic Discovery of Candidates and Members Vlan Discovery of Candidates and Members Through Different VLANs Switch Discovery of Candidates and Members Through Routed PortsDiscovery of Newly Installed Switches in Clusters New out-of-boxHsrp and Standby Cluster Command Switches Virtual IP Addresses in Clusters Other Considerations for Cluster Standby GroupsAutomatic Recovery of Cluster Configuration IP Addresses in Clusters Hostnames in ClustersPasswords in Clusters Switch Clusters and Switch StacksSwitch Stack Switch Cluster Snmp Community Strings in ClustersSwitch Stack Switch Cluster Availability of Switch-Specific Features in Switch Clusters TACACS+ and Radius in ClustersCisco IOS Release 12.225SEC Using Interface Configuration Mode Command or Action Purpose Boot flash image-nameExample Dir flashEnable Show running configurationConfigure terminal Service-module interface slot/port sessionShow power inline Output of the show service-module status commandShow ip interface brief Control+shift+6Sample Output for the dir flash Command on the Router Sample Output for the boot flash Command on the RouterRouter boot flashc2800-adventerprisek9-mz ExamplesRouter# show running config interface gigabitethernet2/0 Router# configure terminalRouter# service-module gigabitethernet2/0 session Switch dir flashSwitch# show ip interface brief Switch# ctrl+shift+6Switch# show power inline Sample Output for Pressing Ctrl+Shift+6 Followed byFeature Default Setting DhcpSTP Prerequisites Clustering Concepts section on Return Sample Output for Entering an Interface Name Sample Output for Assigning the IP Address and Subnet MaskSample Output for Saving the Configuration to Nvram Command or Action PurposeRouter# service-module gigabitethernet1/0 reload Router# service-module gigabitethernet1/0 shutdownRouter# service-module gigabitethernet1/0 reset Cisco IOS Release 12.225SEC Default Switch Stack Configuration RestrictionsAssigning a Stack Member Number Sample Output for the switch renumber Command Sample Output for the reload slot CommandShow switch Switchconfig# switch 6 renumberSetting the Stack Member Priority Value Sample Output for the show switch CommandVerifying Information About the Switch Stack Sample Output for the switch priority CommandSwitchconfig# switch 2 priority Switch show switchSwitch# show platform stack-manager all Switchconfig# show switch neighbors Show switch stack-portsShow version Using the CLI to Manage Switch ClustersRcommand Sample Output for the rcommand and show version Commands Sample Output for the show cluster members CommandChoose View Refresh Choose Cluster Add to Cluster or Password Cluster memberCreating a Cluster Standby Group Detailed Steps from the CLICluster standby-group HSRP-group-name Routing-redundancyNo switchport Sample Output for the ping tftpserver Command Sample Output for the show flash Command Sample Output for the copy tftp flash CommandSwitch# show flash Switch# copy tftp flashRecovering from a Corrupted Software Image Using Xmodem Service-module interface slot/port password-reset FlashinitService-module interface slot/port Password-resetFlashinit Control+6Router# copy flash xmodem TroubleshootingSample Output for the copy flash xmodem Command Sample Output for the copy tftp xmodem Command Router# copy tftp xmodemRouter# service-module gigabitethernet1/0 session Router# service-module gigabitethernet2/0 password-resetRecovering from a Lost or Forgotten Password Optional loadhelper filesystem/file-url Boot -x -v deviceimagename Enable secret passwordRename Copy flashCopy running-configuration startup-configuration ReloadOptional set Service-module password-reset command BootSet Sample Output for the set CommandExample Scenario Action Result Current-stack-member-number Renumber new-stack-member-number Network Configuration Examples Network Demands Suggested Design Methods Cost-Effective Wiring Closet Redundant Gigabit Backbone Cisco SoftPhone Software 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