Stacking Members And Unit Id; Removing And Replacing Stacking Members - D-Link xStack DES-3228PA Web/Installation Manual

Layer 2 stackable 10/100mbps ethernet switch with poe
Hide thumbs Also See for xStack DES-3228PA:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

DES-3228PA Embedded Web System User Guide

Stacking Members and Unit ID

Stacking Unit IDs are essential to the stacking configuration. The stacking operation is determined during the boot
process. The Operation Mode is determined by the Unit ID selected during the initialization process. For example,
if the user selected stand-alone mode, the device boots as a stand-alone device.
The device units are shipped with the default Unit ID of the stand-alone unit. If the device is operating as a stand-
alone unit, all stacking LEDs are off. Once the user selects a different Unit ID, the default Unit ID not erased, and
remains valid, even if the unit is reset.
Unit ID 1 and Unit ID 2 are reserved for Master enabled units. Unit IDs 3 to 6 can be defined for stack members.
When the Master unit boots or when inserting or removing a stack member, the Master unit initiates a stacking dis-
covering process.
Notes
If two members are discovered with the same Unit ID the stack continues to function, however only
the unit with the older join time joins the stack. A message is sent to the user, notifying that a unit failed
to join the stack.

Removing and Replacing Stacking Members

Stacking member 1 and Stacking member 2 are Stacking Master enabled units. Unit 1 and Unit 2 are either desig-
nated as Master Unit or Secondary Master Unit. The Stacking Master assignment is performed during the configu-
ration process. One Master enabled stack member is elected Master, and the other Master enabled stack member
is elected Secondary Master, according to the following decision process:
If only one Stacking Master enabled unit is present, it is elected Master.
If two Stacking Masters enabled stacking members are present, and one has been manually configured as
the Stacking Master, the manually configured member is elected Stacking Master.
If two Master enabled units are present and neither has been manually configured as the Stacking Master, the
one with the longer up-time is elected Stacking Master.
If the two Master enabled stacking members are the same age, Unit 1 is elected Stacking Master.
Notes
Two stacking member are considered the same age if they were inserted within the same ten minute
interval.
For example, Stack member 2 is inserted in the first minute of a ten-minute cycle, and Stack member 1 is inserted
in fifth minute of the same cycle, the units are considered the same age. If there are two Master enabled units that
are the same age, then Unit 1 is elected master.
The Stacking Master and the Secondary Master maintain a Warm Standby. The Warm Standby ensures that the
Secondary Masterworks over for the Stacking Master if a failover occurs. This guarantees that the stack continues
to operate normally.
During the Warm Standby, the Master and the Secondary Masters are synchronized with the static configuration
only. When the Stacking Master is configured, the Stacking Master must synchronize the Stacking Secondary
Master. The Dynamic configuration is not saved, for example, dynamically learned MAC addresses are not saved.
Each port in the stack has a specific Unit ID, port type, and port number, which is part of both the configuration
commands and the configuration files. Configuration files are managed only from the device Stacking Master,
including:
Saving to the FLASH
Page 67

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents