Defining Voice VLAN OUIs Using CLI Commands

The following table summarizes the equivalent CLI command for defining Voice VLAN OUIs.

Table 7-35. Voice VLAN OUIs CLI Commands

CLI Command

Description

 

 

voice vlan oui-table {add mac-address-prefix

To configure the voice OUI table, use the voice vlan oui-table

[description text] remove mac-address-

command in global configuration mode. To return to default,

prefix}

use the no form of this command.

no voice vlan oui-table

 

 

 

Aggregating Ports

Link Aggregation optimizes port usage by linking a group of ports together to form a single LAG (aggregated group). Aggregating ports multiplies the bandwidth between the devices, increases port flexibility, and provides link redundancy.

The device supports both static LAGs and Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) LAGs. LACP LAGs negotiate aggregating port’s links with other LACP ports located on a different device. If the other device ports are also LACP ports, the devices establish a LAG between them.

Consider the following when aggregating ports:

All ports within a LAG must be the same media type.

A VLAN is not configured on the port.

The port is not assigned to a different LAG.

Auto-negotiation mode is not configured on the port.

The port is in full-duplex mode.

All ports in the LAG have the same ingress filtering and tagged modes.

All ports in the LAG have the same back pressure and flow control modes.

All ports in the LAG have the same priority.

All ports in the LAG have the same transceiver type.

The device supports up to eight LAGs, and eight ports in each LAG.

Ports can be configured as LACP ports only if the ports are not part of a previously configured LAG.

Ports added to a LAG lose their individual port configuration. When ports are removed from the LAG, the original port configuration is applied to the ports.

The device uses a hash function to determine which packets are carried on which aggregated-link member. The hash function statistically load-balances the aggregated link members. The device considers an Aggregated Link a single logical port.

Aggregate ports can be linked into link-aggregation port-groups. Each group comprises ports with the same speed, set to full-duplex operations.

382

Configuring Switch Information

Page 382
Image 382
Dell 3548 manual Aggregating Ports