Basic Concepts; Irf Member Roles; Irf Member Id; Irf Port - HP 6125G Configuration Manual

6125 blade switch series irf configuration guide
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Figure 1 IRF application scenario

Basic concepts

This section describes the basic concepts that you might encounter when working with IRF.

IRF member roles

IRF uses two member roles: master and slave (called "subordinate" throughout the documentation).
When switches form an IRF fabric, they elect a master to manage the IRF fabric, and all other switches
back up the master. When the master switch fails, the other switches automatically elect a new master
from among them to take over. For more information about master election, see

IRF member ID

An IRF fabric uses member IDs to uniquely identify and manage its members. This member ID information
is included as the first part of interface numbers and file paths to uniquely identify interfaces and files in
an IRF fabric. For more information about interface and file path naming, see
conventions" and
If two switches have the same IRF member ID, they cannot form an IRF fabric.

IRF port

An IRF port is a logical interface for the connection between IRF member devices. Every IRF-capable
device supports two IRF ports. The IRF ports are named IRF-port n/1 and IRF-port n/2, where n is the
member ID of the switch. The two IRF ports are referred to as "IRF-port 1" and "IRF-port 2" in this book
for simplicity.
To use an IRF port, you must bind at least one physical port to it. The physical ports assigned to an IRF
port automatically form an aggregate IRF link. An IRF port goes down only if all its physical IRF ports are
down.
"File system naming
conventions."
2
"Master
election."
"Interface naming

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