Netgear GSM7228PS - ProSAFE 28 ports Gigabit Ethernet L2 Managed Stackable Switch with PoE Guía De Administador

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Chapter 18.  Switch Stacks 
 
ProSafe 7000 Managed Switch Release 8.0.3 
1. 
The switch that is currently the stack master.
2. 
The switch with the highest stack member priority value.
Note:  
NETGEAR recommends assigning the highest priority value to the 
switch that you prefer to be the stack master. This ensures that the 
switch is re-elected as stack master if a re-election occurs.
3. 
The switch with the higher MAC address.
A stack master retains its role unless one of these events occurs:
•     
The stack master is removed from the switch stack
•     
The stack master is reset or powered off
•     
The stack master has failed
•     
The switch stack membership is increased by adding powered-on standalone switches or 
switch stacks
In the case of a master re-election, the new stack master becomes available after a few 
seconds. In the meantime, the switch stack uses the forwarding tables in memory to minimize 
network disruption. The physical interfaces on the other available stack members are not 
affected while a new stack master is elected. If a new stack master is elected and the 
previous stack master becomes available, the previous stack master does not resume its role 
as stack master.
Stack Members
A switch stack has up to 8 stack members connected through their stacking ports. A switch 
stack always has one stack master.
A standalone switch is a switch stack with one stack member that also operates as the stack 
master. You can connect one standalone switch to another to create a switch stack containing 
two stack members, with one of them being the stack master. You can connect standalone 
switches to an existing switch stack to increase the stack membership.
The operation of the switch stack continues uninterrupted during membership changes 
unless you remove the stack master or you add powered-on standalone switches or switch 
stacks.
Stack Member Numbers
A stack member number (1 to 8) identifies each member in the switch stack. The member 
number also determines the interface-level configuration that a stack member uses. You can 
display the stack member number by using the show switch user EXEC command.
A new, out-of-the-box switch (one that has not joined a switch stack or has not been manually 
assigned a stack member number) ships with a default stack member number of 1. When it