6-11
Catalyst 3560 Switch Software Configuration Guide
OL-8553-06
Chapter 6 Clustering Switches
Planning a Switch Cluster
manage the cluster, you must access the active cluster command switch through the virtual IP address,
not through the command-switch IP address. This is in case the IP address of the active cluster command
switch is different from the virtual IP address of the cluster standby group.
If the active cluster command switch fails, the standby cluster command switch assumes ownership of
the virtual IP address and becomes the active cluster command switch. The passive switches in the
cluster standby group compare their assigned priorities to decide the new standby cluster command
switch. The passive standby switch with the highest priority then becomes the standby cluster command
switch. When the previously active cluster command switch becomes active again, it resumes its role as
the active cluster command switch, and the current active cluster command switch becomes the standby
cluster command switch again. For more information about IP address in switch clusters, see the “IP
Addresses” section on page 6-13.
Other Considerations for Cluster Standby Groups
These requirements also apply:
Standby cluster command switches must be the same type of switches as the cluster command
switch. For example, if the cluster command switch is a Catalyst 3560 switch, the standby cluster
command switches must also be Catalyst 3560 switches. Refer to the switch configuration guide of
other cluster-capable switches for their requirements on standby cluster command switches.
If your switch cluster has a Catalyst 3560 switch, it should be the cluster command switch unless
the cluster has a Catalyst 3750 switch or switch stack. If the switch cluster has a Catalyst 3750
switch or switch stack, that switch or switch stack must be the cluster command switch.
Only one cluster standby group can be assigned to a cluster. You can have more than one
router-redundancy standby group.
An HSRP group can be both a cluster standby group and a router-redundancy group. However, if a
router-redundancy group becomes a cluster standby group, router redundancy becomes disabled on
that group. You can re-enable it by using the CLI. For more information about HSRP and router
redundancy, see Chapter 40, “Configuring HSRP.”
All standby-group members must be members of the cluster.
Note There is no limit to the number of switches that you can assign as standby cluster command
switches. However, the total number of switches in the cluster—which would include the
active cluster command switch, standby-group members, and cluster member
switches—cannot be more than 16.
Each standby-group member (Figure 6-7) must be connected to the cluster command switch through
the same VLAN. In this example, the cluster command switch and standby cluster command
switches are Catalyst 2970, Catalyst 3550, Catalyst 3560, or Catalyst 3750 cluster command
switches. Each standby-group member must also be redundantly connected to each other through at
least one VLAN in common with the switch cluster.