Cisco Systems 200 Manual De Usuario

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Port Management
Configuring Link Aggregation
Cisco Small Business 200 Series Smart Switch Administration Guide 
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Configuring Link Aggregation
This section describes how to configure LAGs. It covers the following topics:
Link Aggregation Overview
Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) is part of the IEEE specification (802.3az) 
that enables you to bundle several physical ports together to form a single logical 
channel (LAG). LAGs multiply the bandwidth, increase port flexibility, and provide 
link redundancy between two devices.
Two types of LAGs are supported:
Static—A LAG is static if the LACP is disabled on it.   The group of ports 
assigned to a static LAG are always active members. After a LAG is manually 
created, the LACP option cannot be added or removed, until the LAG is 
edited and a member is removed (which can be added prior to applying), 
then the LACP button become available for editing.
Dynamic—A LAG is dynamic if LACP is enabled on it. The group of ports 
assigned to dynamic LAG are candidate ports. LACP determines which 
candidate ports are active member ports. The non-active candidate ports 
are standby ports ready to replace any failing active member ports.
Load Balancing
Traffic forwarded to a LAG is load-balanced across the active member ports, thus 
achieving an effective bandwidth close to the aggregate bandwidth of all the 
active member ports of the LAG.
Traffic load balancing over the active member ports of a LAG is managed by a 
hash-based distribution function that distributes Unicast and Multicast traffic 
based on Layer 2 or Layer 3 packet header information.