Configuring Aggregated Ethernet Lacp (Cli Procedure) - Juniper JUNOS OS 10.4 - FOR EX REV 1 Manual

For ex series ethernet switches
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Table 206: IP Options (continued)
Field
IPv6 Address
Related
Documentation

Configuring Aggregated Ethernet LACP (CLI Procedure)

1334
®
OS for EX Series Ethernet Switches, Release 10.4
Function
Specifies an IPv6 address for the selected
LAG.
Configuring Aggregated Ethernet Interfaces (CLI Procedure) on page 1330
Example: Configuring Aggregated Ethernet High-Speed Uplinks Between an EX4200
Virtual Chassis Access Switch and an EX4200 Virtual Chassis Distribution Switch on
page 940
Example: Configuring Aggregated Ethernet High-Speed Uplinks with LACP Between
an EX4200 Virtual Chassis Access Switch and an EX4200 Virtual Chassis Distribution
Switch on page 947
Verifying the Status of a LAG Interface on page 1346
Configuring Aggregated Ethernet LACP (CLI Procedure) on page 1334
Understanding Aggregated Ethernet Interfaces and LACP on page 1244
For aggregated Ethernet interfaces on EX Series switches, you can configure the Link
Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP). LACP is one method of bundling several physical
interfaces to form one logical interface. You can configure aggregated Ethernet with or
without LACP enabled.
Before you configure LACP, be sure you have:
Configured the aggregated Ethernet bundles—also known as link aggregation groups
(LAGs). See "Configuring Aggregated Ethernet Interfaces (CLI Procedure)" on page 1330
When LACP is enabled, the local and remote sides of the aggregated Ethernet links
exchange protocol data units (PDUs), containing information about the state of the link.
You can configure Ethernet links to actively transmit PDUs, or you can configure the links
to passively transmit them, sending out LACP PDUs only when they receive them from
another link. One side of the link must be configured as
NOTE: Do not add LACP to a LAG if the remote end of the LAG link is a security
device, unless the security device supports LACP. Security devices often do
not support LACP because they require a deterministic configuration.
Your Action
1.
Select the check box
IPv6 address
2. Type an IP address—for example,
2001:ab8:85a3::8a2e:370:7334
3. Enter the subnet mask or address
prefix.
4. Click
.
OK
active
for the link to be up.
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.
.
.

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