Lacp Terminology - Enterasys 1G58x-09 Configuration Manual

Enterasys network device configuration guide
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Port Configuration Command Set
Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP)
Controlling the addition of a link to a LAG, and the creation of the group if necessary.
Monitoring the status of aggregated links to ensure that the aggregation is still valid.
Removing a link from a LAG if its membership is no longer valid, and removing the group if it
no longer has any member links.
In order to allow LACP to determine whether a set of links connect to the same device, and to
determine whether those links are compatible from the point of view of aggregation, it is necessary
to be able to establish:
A globally unique identifier for each device that participates in link aggregation.
A means of identifying the set of capabilities associated with each port and with each aggregator,
as understood by a given device.
A means of identifying a LAG and its associated aggregator.

4.3.12.2 LACP Terminology

Table 4-8
defines key terminology used in LACP configuration.
Table 4-8 LACP Terms and Definitions
Term
Aggregator
LAG
LACPDU
4-60
Matrix E1 Series (1G58x-09 and 1H582-xx) Configuration Guide
Definition
A virtual port that controls link aggregation for underlying physical
ports. Depending on the model and expansion modules installed,
each Matrix E1 device can provide up to 12 aggregator ports, which
are designated in the CLI as lag.x.y, where x is the slot location and y
is the port number. For a description of how to designate slot location
and port numbering, refer to
Link Aggregation Group. Once underlying physical ports (i.e.,
fe.x.x, or ge.x.x) are associated with an aggregator port, the resulting
aggregation will be represented as one LAG with a lag.x.y port
designation.
Link Aggregation Control Protocol Data Unit. The protocol
exchanges aggregation state/mode information by way of a port's
actor and partner operational states. LACPDUs sent by the first party
(the actor) convey to the second party (the actor's protocol partner)
what the actor knows, both about its own state and that of its partner.
Section
4.1.2.

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