Cisco SF500-24 Administration Manual page 77

Esw2 series advanced switches
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An example of eight devices connected into a stack is shown in the following:
Stack Architecture (Chain Topology)
A stack provides the following benefits:
Network capacity can be expanded or contracted dynamically. By adding a
unit, the administrator can dynamically increase the number of ports in the
stack while maintaining a single, logically-managed device. Similarly, units
can be removed to decrease network capacity.
The stacked system supports redundancy in the following ways:
-
The backup unit becomes the master of the stack if the original master
fails.
-
The stack system supports two types of topologies: chain (see
Architecture (Chain
Topology"). In ring topology, if one of the stack ports fails, the stack
continues to function in chain topology (see
-
A process known as Fast Stack Link Failover is supported on the ports in
a ring stack to reduce the duration of data packet loss when one of the
stack ports link fails. Until the stack recovers to the new chain topology,
the stack port that is currently down, loops back the packets that were
supposed to be sent through it, so that the packets arrive at their
destination using the remaining stacking links. During Fast Stack Link
failover, the master/backup units remain active and functioning.
Cisco 500 Series Stackable Managed Switch Administration Guide Release 1.3
Administration: Stack Management
Topology)"and ring (see
Overview
"Stack
"Stack in Ring
Stack
Topology).

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