Member Link with Non-LAG Partner
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.
Table 10: Behavior of Member Links Using Local and Remote LACP Modes
Remote LACP Mode
Local LACP Mode
Disabled
Passive
Active
When a member link has a non-LAG partner, there are two separate links in a 1:1
configuration. To successfully configure this, you must disable LACP.
When a failover occurs and LACP is active, the partner might receive a new LAG ID and
the LACP PDUs receive a new MAC address; therefore, the member links are not
aggregated or the bundle is disabled, terminating the sessions above it.
The partner that is connected to the redundant link must not be forwarding network
traffic; that is, it is either blocked through a protocol such as RSTP, or MAC address
learning has selected the active port. The redundant link must not transmit over the
redundant link to that MAC. The behavior of the redundant link depends on the failure
detection method that is controlled by the network protocol that is blocking the port.
Ethernet Link Redundancy and RSTP
In a LAG to non-LAG configuration, you can configure redundancy capabilities when
redundant ports are connected to a bridged network that has RSTP controlling the
topology.
On external devices, we recommend that you configure RSTP-enabled bridged ports
that are connected to the LAG interfaces as edge ports to enable the ports to transition
quickly to forwarding state upon reconfiguration, and to avoid the listening and learning
states required by the spanning tree protocol. The edge port designation instructs the
local bridge that bridge loops do not exist through the interface, enabling it to skip the
listening and learning states.
Figure 29: Dual-Homed Heterogeneous Configuration in an RSTP Network
Chapter 6: Configuring 802.3ad Link Aggregation and Link Redundancy
Disabled
Passive
Active
–
–
215
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