Brocade Communications Systems 53-1001761-01 Manual De Usuario

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Converged Enhanced Ethernet Administrator’s Guide
65
53-1001761-01
DRAFT: BROCADE CONFIDENTIAL
Chapter
6
Configuring Link Aggregation using the CEE CLI
In this chapter
Link aggregation overview
Link aggregation allows you to bundle multiple physical Ethernet links to form a single logical trunk 
providing enhanced performance and redundancy. The aggregated trunk is referred to as a Link 
Aggregation Group (LAG). The LAG is viewed as a single link by connected devices, the spanning 
tree protocol, IEEE 802.1Q VLANs, and so on. When one physical link in the LAG fails, the other 
links stay up and there is no disruption to traffic. 
To configure links to form a LAG, the physical links must be the same speed and all links must go to 
the same neighboring device. Link aggregation can be done by manually configuring the LAG or by 
dynamically configuring the LAG using the IEEE 802.3ad Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP).
NOTE
The LAG or LAG interface is also referred to as a port-channel.
The benefits of link aggregation are summarized as follows:
Increased bandwidth. The logical bandwidth can be dynamically changed as the demand 
changes.
Increased availability.
Load sharing.
Rapid configuration and reconfiguration.
The Brocade FCoE hardware supports the following trunk types:
Static, standards-based LAG.
Dynamic, standards-based LAG using LACP.
Static, Brocade-proprietary LAG.
Dynamic, Brocade-proprietary LAG using proprietary enhancements to LACP.
Link Aggregation Group configuration
You can configure a maximum of 24 Link Aggregation Groups (LAG) with up to 16 links per standard 
LAG and four links per Brocade-proprietary LAG. Each LAG is associated with an aggregator. The 
aggregator manages the Ethernet frame collection and distribution functions.