Placing Summit Family Switches For Stacked Operation; Using The Summitstack-V Feature - Extreme Networks Summit X150-24t Hardware Installation Manual

Summit x150 series; summit x250e series; summit x350 series; summit x440 series; summit x450 series; summit x450a series; summit x450e series; summit x460 series; summit x480 series; summit x650 series; summit x670 series;
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Confidential and proprietary information of Extreme Networks. © 2011 Extreme Networks, Inc.
Building a SummitStack Configuration
NOTE
Additional types of stacking cables may have been released since this guide was published. Contact your
Extreme Networks sales representative for the most recent information about available cables.
Placing Summit Family Switches for
Stacked Operation
This section summarizes the recommended best practices for installing Summit switches for a
SummitStack configuration. For detailed information about how to configure and manage the stack
and how a stack operates, refer to the ExtremeXOS Concepts Guide.
When you install switches for a SummitStack configuration, follow these recommendations:
Use the shortest possible stacking cables to connect the switches in the stack; this reduces the
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likelihood that the stacking cables might be accidentally damaged or disconnected. Stacking cables
are available in lengths from 0.3 meters to 100 meters (see
When possible, place all switches for the stack in the same rack or in adjacent racks; this facilitates
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using shorter stacking cables.
The stack master is the switch through which you will perform the initial stack configuration, using
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the console port. For simplicity and ease of connecting the stacking cables, plan to designate the top
switch in a vertical physical stack as the stack master. If switches are installed in several adjacent
racks, place the stack master at one end of the row.
Physically locate the intended master and backup nodes adjacent to each other, and connect these
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switches directly to each other.
For easier software configuration of the stack, connect the stacking cables in the order and
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arrangement shown in the tables that accompany the examples starting
On the stack master switch, connect the Ethernet management port to your management network.
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To provide management access to the stack in case of a failure in the master switch, connect all
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switches that will participate in redundancy to your management network using the Ethernet
management port on each switch.
Because of the weight of the cable, Extreme Networks strongly recommends the use of cable
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management hardware to support the cables and provide strain relief at the connectors when you
use the SummitStack 128G cable, SummitStack 64G cable, or SummitStack 128G/64G cable. (See
"Connecting Stacking Cables" on page

Using the SummitStack-V Feature

The dedicated stacking ports (either fixed or on installed VIMs or stacking modules) are called native
stacking ports. The SummitStack-V feature allows you to reconfigure one or two 10-Gbps Ethernet data
ports to operate as stacking ports. When these ports are enabled to support stacking, they are called
alternate stacking ports. This feature allows you to use less expensive cables to connect the switches in a
stack. Because copper and fiber Ethernet ports support longer cable distances, this feature also allows
you to extend the physical distance between stack nodes. The SummitStack-V feature supports stack
nodes on different floors in a building or in different buildings on a campus.
156
All rights reserved. DRAFT. October 20, 2011
171.)
Table
50).
on page
Summit Family Switches Hardware Installation Guide
160.

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