Binding Physical Interfaces To Irf Ports - H3C S5830V2 Configuration Manual

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Connect the devices into a daisy-chain topology or a ring topology. A ring topology is more reliable
(see
Figure 1
daisy-chain topology. Rather, the IRF fabric changes to a daisy-chain topology without interrupting
network services.
To use the ring topology, you must have a minimum of three member devices.
Figure 11 Daisy-chain topology vs. ring topology
Master
IRF-Port1
Subordinate
IRF-Port1
Subordinate
Daisy-chain topology

Binding physical interfaces to IRF ports

When you bind physical interfaces to IRF ports, follow these guidelines:
Follow the restrictions in
You must always shut down a physical interface before binding it to an IRF port or removing the
binding. Start the shutdown operation on the master, and then the member device that has the
fewest number of hops from the master.
On a physical interface bound to an IRF port, you can execute only the description, flow-interval,
priority-flow-control, and shutdown commands. For more information about these commands, see Layer
2—LAN Switching Command Reference.
To bind physical interfaces to IRF ports:
Step
1.
Enter system view.
1). In ring topology, the failure of one IRF link does not cause the IRF fabric to split as in
IRF
IRF-Port2
IRF-Port2
"IRF physical interface restrictions and binding
Command
system-view
Master
IRF-Port1
IRF
IRF-Port2
IRF-Port1
Subordinate
Ring topology
19
IRF-Port2
IRF-Port1
IRF-Port2
Subordinate
requirements."
Remarks
N/A

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