Cisco Cisco SG300-28 28-Port Gigabit Managed Switch Maintenance Manual

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Port Management
Link Aggregation
Cisco 300 Series Managed Switches Administration Guide
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9
 
LACP Priority and Rules
LACP system priority and LACP port priority are both used to determine which of 
the candidate ports become active member ports in a dynamic LAG configured 
with more than eight candidate ports. 
The selected candidate ports of the LAG are all connected to the same remote 
device. Both the local and remote switches have a LACP system priority. 
The following algorithm is used to determine whether LACP port priorities are 
taken from the local or remote device: the local LACP System Priority is compared 
to the remote LACP System Priority. The device with the lowest priority controls 
candidate port selection to the LAG. If both priorities are the same, the local and 
remote MAC addresses are compared. The priority of the device with the lowest 
MAC address controls candidate port selection to the LAG. 
A dynamic LAG can have up to 16 Ethernet ports of the same type. Up to eight 
ports can be active, and up to eight ports can be in standby mode. When there are 
more than eight ports in the dynamic LAG, the device on the controlling end of the 
link uses port priorities to determine which ports are bundled into the LAG and 
which ports are put in hot-standby mode. Port priorities on the other device (the 
non-controlling end of the link) are ignored. 
The following are additional rules used to select the active or standby ports in a 
dynamic LACP:
Any link operating at a different speed from the highest-speed active 
member or operating at half-duplex is made standby. All the active ports in 
a dynamic LAG operate at the same baud rate.
If the port LACP priority of the link is lower than that of the currently-active 
link members, and the number of active members is already at the maximum 
number, the link is made inactive, and placed in standby mode.
LACP With No Link Partner
In order for LACP to create a LAG, the ports on both link ends should be 
configured for LACP, meaning that the ports send LACP PDUs and handle received 
PDUs.