Stacking Overview; Brief Introduction; Typical Networking Topology; Product Features - 3Com Switch 4500 26-Port Configuration Manual

Switch 4500 family 26-port, 50-port, pwr 26-port, pwr 50-port
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16
C
1: G
HAPTER
ETTING

Stacking Overview

Brief Introduction

Typical Networking
Topology

Product Features

S
TARTED
With the 3Com Switch 4500, up to eight units can be operated together as a
single larger logical unit to simplify administration. This is called stacking.
Stacking allows you to add ports in a site or location incrementally, without adding
complexity to the management of the switch. Only a single IP address is required
for a stack. Also, a single interface is presented for configuring a stack using
telnet, CLI, web management, or SNMP.
Typical stacking networking topology is as shown in
same type (that is, units) form a the stack. The Switch 4500 stacking makes use of
existing Gigabit connections for interconnecting the members of the stack.
Stacking
Figure 1
Table 4
lists the function features:
Table 4 Function Features
Features
VLAN
STP protocol
Flow control
Broadcast Suppression
Multicast
IP routing
DHCP
Link aggregation
Mirror
Networking Topology
Description
VLAN compliant with IEEE 802.1Q Standard
Port-based VLAN
Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) / Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol
(RSTP), compliant with IEEE 802.1D/IEEE802.1w Standard
IEEE 802.3 flow control (full-duplex)
Back-pressure based flow control (half-duplex)
Broadcast Suppression
Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) Snooping
Static route
RIP V1/v2
IP routing policy
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) Relay
DHCP Client
Link aggregation
Mirror based on the traffic classification
Port-based mirror
Figure
1. Switches of the

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