PowerConnect 3548

The PowerConnect 3548 provides 48 10/100Mbps ports plus two SFP ports, and two Copper ports which can be used to forward traffic in a stand-alone device, or as stacking ports when the device is stacked. The device also provides one RS-232 console port. The PowerConnect 3548 is a stackable device, but also functions as a stand-alone device.

PowerConnect 3548P

The PowerConnect 3548P provides 48 10/100Mbps ports, two SFP ports, and two copper ports that can be used to forward traffic when the device is in stand-alone mode, or as stacking ports when the device is part of a stack. The device also provides one RS-232 console port. In addition, PowerConnect 3548P provides PoE.

Figure 1-2. PowerConnect 3548 and PowerConnect 3548P

Stacking Overview

PowerConnect 3524/P and PowerConnect 3548/P stacking provides multiple switch management through a single point as if all stack members are a single unit. All stack members are accessed through a single IP address through which the stack is managed. The stack is managed from a:

Web-based interface

SNMP Management Station

Command Line Interface (CLI)

PowerConnect 3524/P and PowerConnect 3548/P devices support stacking up to eight units per stack, or can operate as stand-alone units.

During the Stacking setup, one switch is selected as the Stack Master and another stacking member can be selected as the Backup Master. All other devices are selected as stack members, and assigned a unique Unit ID.

Switch software is downloaded separately for each stack members. However, all units in the stack must be running the same software version.

Switch stacking and configuration is maintained by the Stack Master. The Stack Master detects and reconfigures the ports with minimal operational impact in the event of:

Unit Failure

Inter-unit Stacking Link Failure

Unit Insertion

Removal of a Stacking Unit

12

Introduction

Page 12
Image 12
Dell manual Stacking Overview, PowerConnect 3548P