HP 1910 User Manual page 233

Hp 1910 gigabit ethernet switch series
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exceeded, place the candidate selected ports with smaller port numbers in the Selected state and
those with greater port numbers in the Unselected state.
4.
Place the member ports in the Unselected state if all the member ports are down.
5.
Place the ports that cannot aggregate with the reference port in the Unselected state, for example,
as a result of the inter-board aggregation restriction.
After a static aggregation group has reached the limit on Selected ports, any port that joins the group is
placed in Unselected state to avoid traffic interruption on the existing Selected ports. However, the state
of link aggregation member ports might change after a reboot.
Dynamic aggregation mode
LACP is enabled on member ports in a dynamic aggregation group.
In a dynamic aggregation group, a Selected port can receive and send LACPDUs. An Unselected port
can receive and send LACPDUs only when it is up and has the same configurations as the aggregate
interface.
In a dynamic aggregation group, the local system (the actor) negotiates with the remote system (the
partner) to determine the aggregation state of each port in the following steps:
1.
Compare the system IDs (A system ID comprises the system LACP priority and the system MAC
address). The lower the LACP priority, the smaller the system ID. If LACP priority values are the
same, the two systems compare their system MAC addresses. The lower the MAC address, the
smaller the system ID.
2.
The system with the smaller system ID chooses the port with the smallest port ID as the reference
port. (A port ID comprises a port priority and a port number.) The port with the lower priority value
is chosen. If two ports have the same aggregation priority, the system compares their port numbers.
The port with the smaller port number becomes the reference port.
3.
If a port in up state is with the same port attributes and class-two configuration as the reference port,
and the peer port of the port is with the same port attributes and class-two configurations as the
peer port of the reference port, consider the port as a candidate selected port; otherwise place the
port in the Unselected state.
The number of Selected ports in an aggregation group is limited. When the number of Selected ports is
under the limit, all the member ports are set to Selected state. When the limit is exceeded, the system sets
the candidate selected ports with smaller port IDs as the Selected ports, and place other ports in the
Unselected state. At the same time, the peer device, being aware of the changes, sets the aggregation
state of local member ports the same as their peer ports.
The system places the ports that cannot aggregate with the reference port in the Unselected state, for
example, as the result of the inter-board aggregation restriction.
When you configure static and dynamic aggregation modes, follow these guidelines:
In an aggregation group, a Selected port must have the same port attributes and class-two
configurations as the reference port. To keep these configurations consistent, you should configure
the port manually.
Any port attribute or class-two configuration change might affect the aggregation state of all
member ports and ongoing traffic. If you need to make this change, make sure you understand its
impact on the live network.
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