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Software Configuration Guide—Release 15.0(2)SG
OL-23818-01
Chapter 22 Configuring EtherChannel and Link State Tracking About EtherChannel
Configuring EtherChannels
These subsections describe how EtherChannels are configured:
EtherChannel Configuration Overview, page 22-3
Manual EtherChannel Configuration, page 22-3
PAgP EtherChannel Configuration, page 22-3
IEEE 802.3ad LACP EtherChannel Configuration, page 22-4

EtherChannel Configuration Overview

You can configure EtherChannels manually or use the Port Aggregation Control Protocol (PAgP) or the
Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) (Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)EWA and later), to form
EtherChannels. The EtherChannel protocols allow ports with similar characteristics to form an
EtherChannel through dynamic negotiation with connected network devices. PAgP is a
Cisco-proprietary protocol and LACP is defined in IEEE 802.3ad.
PAgP and LACP do not interoperate. Ports configured to use PAgP cannot form EtherChannels with
ports configured to use LACP and vice versa.
Table 22-1 lists the user-configurable EtherChannel modes.

Manual EtherChannel Configuration

Manually configured EtherChannel ports do not exchange EtherChannel protocol packets. A manually
configured EtherChannel forms only when you configure all ports compatibly in the EtherChannel.

PAgP EtherChannel Configuration

PAgP supports the automatic creation of EtherChannels by exchanging PAgP packets between LAN
ports. PAgP packets are exchanged only between ports in auto and desirable modes.
Table 22-1 EtherChannel Modes
Mode Description
on Mode that forces the LAN port to channel unconditionally. In the on mode, a usable
EtherChannel exists only when a LAN port group in the on mode is connected to another
LAN port group in the on mode. Because ports configured in the on mode do not negotiate,
there is no negotiation traffic between the ports.
auto PAgP mode that places a LAN port into a passive negotiating state in which the port
responds to PAgP packets it receives but does not initiate PAgP negotiation.
desirable PAgP mode that places a LAN port into an active negotiating state in which the port
initiates negotiations with other LAN ports by sending PAgP packets.
passive LACP mode that places a port into a passive negotiating state in which the port responds
to LACP packets it receives but does not initiate LACP negotiation.
active LACP mode that places a port into an active negotiating state in which the port initiates
negotiations with other ports by sending LACP packets.