Dell 7000 Series manual Stacking and Performance, Stacking and Redundancy

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Stacking Dell PowerConnect 7000 Series Switches

required for reconfiguration. Additional stack members can immediately utilize existing configuration information such as routing and switching configurations, VLANs, ACLs, port profiles, and security certificates.

Stacking and Performance

For situations where there is a need to pass traffic between switches and the aggregate bandwidth required between PowerConnect 7000 Series switches does not exceed 64 Gbps (2 ports, 16 Gbps Tx and Rx each), a stacking configuration offers an attractive alternative to Link Aggregation Groups (LAGs). Stacking configuration is generally transparent to the operator and does not require configuration beyond cabling. In addition, failover times are generally faster in a stack configuration than in spanning tree or link aggregation group configurations. Note that other PowerConnect Series switches may have different supported bandwidths for stacking.

Stacking and Redundancy

By connecting a cable from the last switch in a stack back to the first switch, the operator ensures that a stack has the protection of redundant paths for control and data traffic, including support for LAGs configured across multiple switches. This means that any single point of failure (a switch or a stack cable failure) will not affect the overall operation of the remaining stack elements.

Figure# 1 shows two stacking configurations with a single stacking module on each switch. In the recommended configuration, a stacking cable connects each switch to the next, and the top switch is connected to the bottom switch to form a complete ring.

Figure 1. Stack Configured in a Ring

Recommended

Module

Switch

A

 

 

1

 

2

 

3

 

4

 

5

aCables connected in a complete ring.

Not recommended

 

Module

Switch

 

 

A

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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5

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

rCables not connected in a complete ring.

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Contents Dell Technical White Paper Stacking Dell PowerConnect Series Switches Stacking Dell PowerConnect 7000 Series Switches Contents Stacking and Management IntroductionApplicability Stacking and Redundancy Stacking and PerformanceDual Stacking Modules Configured in a Ring Power-Up Sequencing Considerations Mixing M6348 and PC7000 Series Switches in a StackConsole#boot auto-copy-sw allow-downgrade Initial Installation and Power-up of a Stack Selecting the Standby Unit Selecting the Master UnitUpdating the Firmware on a Stack Automatic UpdateManual Update FTP Creating a Separate Vlan for File DownloadsFrom the Switching Vlan Vlan Membership page, click Add Navigate to the Routing IP IP Interface Configuration Page Stacking Dell PowerConnect 7000 Series Switches Click Apply Adding a Stack Member with Minimal Interruption Removing a Stack Member with Minimal Interruption Effect of Master Failover on PoE Devices Merging Two Operational StacksMaster Failover Scenario Stack Member FailoverFailover Scenarios Stack Split Stack Split with Manager Failure Nonstop Forwarding Nonstop Forwarding Scenario Initiating a Warm Failover of the Manager UnitNonstop Forwarding Example Router NSF Scenario Configuration via CLIStack Switch Switch NSF Example Parameter Timing NSF Re-convergence TimingSmall Configuration Stacking CLI CommandsSummary Stacking Web Interface