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Catalyst 3750-X and 3560-X Switch Software Configuration Guide
OL-21521-01
Chapter 6 Clustering Switches
Planning a Switch Cluster
Passwords
You do not need to assign passwords to an individual switch if it will be a cluster member. When a switch
joins a cluster, it inherits the command-switch password and retains it when it leaves the cluster. If no
command-switch password is configured, the cluster member switch inherits a null password. Cluster
member switches only inherit the command-switch password.
If you change the member-switch password to be different from the command-switch password and save
the change, the switch is not manageable by the cluster command switch until you change the
member-switch password to match the command-switch password. Rebooting the member switch does
not revert the password back to the command-switch password. We recommend that you do not change
the member-switch password after it joins a cluster.
For more information about passwords, see the “Preventing Unauthorized Access to Your Switch
section on page 10-1.
For password considerations specific to the Catalyst 1900 and Catalyst 2820 switches, see the
installation and configuration guides for those switches.
SNMP Community Strings
A cluster member switch inherits the command-switch first read-only (RO) and read-write (RW)
community strings with @esN appended to the community strings:
command-switch-readonly-community-string@esN, where N is the member-switch number.
command-switch-readwrite-community-string@esN, where N is the member-switch number.
If the cluster command switch has multiple read-only or read-write community strings, only the first
read-only and read-write strings are propagated to the cluster member switch.
The switches support an unlimited number of community strings and string lengths. For more
information about SNMP and community strings, see Chapter 35, “Configuring SNMP.
For SNMP considerations specific to the Catalyst 1900 and Catalyst 2820 switches, see the installation
and configuration guides specific to those switches.
Switch Clusters and Switch Stacks
A switch cluster can have one or more Catalyst 3750-E switch stacks. Each switch stack can act as the
cluster command switch or as a single cluster member. Table 6-2 describes the basic differences between
switch stacks and switch clusters. For more information about switch stacks, see Chapter 5, “Managing
Switch Stacks.”
Tab le 6-2 Basic Comparison of Switch Stacks and Switch Clusters
Switch Stack Switch Cluster
Made up of Catalyst 3750-E or Catalyst 3750-X switches only Made up of cluster-capable switches, such as
Catalyst 3750-E, Catalyst 3560-E, Catalyst 3750, and
Catalyst 2950 switches
Stack members are connected through StackWise Plus ports Cluster members are connected through LAN ports
Requires one stack master and supports up to eight other stack
members Requires 1 cluster command switch and supports up to
15 other cluster member switches