Etherchannel Configuration Guidelines And Restrictions; Guidelines For Configuring A Port - Cisco WS-C2948G-GE-TX Configuration Manual

Catalyst 4500 series switch
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Chapter 6
Configuring Fast EtherChannel and Gigabit EtherChannel

EtherChannel Configuration Guidelines and Restrictions

If improperly configured, some EtherChannel ports are disabled automatically to avoid network loops
and other problems. Follow the guidelines below to avoid configuration problems.
Note
Except where noted, these guidelines apply to both PAgP and LACP.

Guidelines for Configuring a Port

This section lists the guidelines and restrictions for configuring a port for EtherChannel:
Catalyst 4500 Series, Catalyst 2948G, Catalyst 2948G-GE-TX, and Catalyst 2980G Switches Software Configuration Guide—Release 8.2GLX
78-15908-01
Ensure that you have a maximum of eight compatibly configured ports per EtherChannel; the ports
do not have to be contiguous or on the same module.
Ensure that all ports in an EtherChannel use the same protocol; you cannot run two protocols on a
module.
PAgP and LACP are not compatible; both ends of a channel must use the same protocol.
Switches can be configured manually, with PAgP on one side and LACP on the other side in
Note
the on mode.
You can change the protocol at any time, but this change causes all existing EtherChannels to reset
to the default channel mode for the new protocol.
Configure all ports in an EtherChannel to operate at the same speed and duplex mode (full duplex
only for LACP mode).
Enable all ports in an EtherChannel. If you disable a port in an EtherChannel, it is treated as a link
failure and its traffic is transferred to one of the remaining ports in the EtherChannel.
You cannot assign a port to more than one channel group at the same time.
Ports with different port path costs, set by the set spantree portcost command, can form an
EtherChannel as long as they are otherwise compatibly configured. Setting different port path costs
does not, by itself, make ports incompatible for the formation of an EtherChannel.
PAgP and LACP manage channels differently. When all the ports in a channel get disabled, PAgP
removes them from its internal channels list; the show commands do not display the channel. With
LACP, when all the ports in a channel get disabled, LACP does not remove the channel; the show
commands continue to display the channel even though all its ports are down. To determine if a
channel is actively sending and receiving traffic with LACP, use the show port command to see if
the link is up or down.
LACP does not support half-duplex links. If a port is in active/passive mode and becomes half
duplex, the port is suspended (and a syslog message is generated). The port is shown as "connected"
using the show port command and as "not connected" using the show spantree command. This
discrepancy exists because the port is physically connected but never joined spanning tree. To get
the port to join spanning tree, either set the duplex to full or set the channel mode to off for that port.
With software release 7.3(1) and later releases, LACP behavior for half-duplex links has changed
and affected ports are no longer suspended. Instead of suspending a port, LACP protocol data unit
(PDU) transmission (if any) is suppressed. If the port is part of a channel, the port is detached from
EtherChannel Configuration Guidelines and Restrictions
6-3

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