3com WX3000 Manuel D’Utilisation

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Link Aggregation Configuration 
 
 
The term switch used throughout this chapter refers to a switching device in a generic sense or the 
switching engine of a unified switch in the WX3000 series. 
The sample output information in this manual was created on the WX3024. The output information 
on your device may vary. 
 
Overview 
Introduction to Link Aggregation 
Link aggregation means aggregating several ports together to form an aggregation group, so as to 
implement outgoing/incoming load sharing among the member ports in the group and to enhance the 
connection reliability. 
Depending on different aggregation modes, link aggregation falls into three types: manual, static LACP, 
and dynamic LACP aggregations. Depending on whether or not load sharing is implemented, 
aggregation groups can be load-sharing or non-load-sharing aggregation groups. 
For the member ports in an aggregation group, their basic configuration must be the same. The basic 
configuration includes STP, QoS, VLAN, port attributes and other associated settings. 
STP configuration, including STP status (enabled or disabled), link attribute (point-to-point or not), 
STP priority, path cost, standard packet format, maximum packet transmission speed, loop 
prevention status, root protection status, edge port or not. 
QoS configuration, including traffic limit, priority remarking, default 802.1p priority, bandwidth 
assurance, congestion avoidance, traffic redirection, traffic statistics, and so on. 
VLAN configuration, including permitted VLANs, and default VLAN ID. 
Port attribute configuration, including port rate, duplex mode, and link type (trunk, hybrid, or 
access).  
Introduction to LACP 
The purpose of link aggregation control protocol (LACP) is to implement dynamic link aggregation and 
deaggregation. This protocol is based on IEEE802.3ad and uses LACPDUs (link aggregation control 
protocol data unit) to interact with its peer. 
After LACP is enabled on a port, LACP notifies the following information of the port to its peer by 
sending LACPDUs: priority and MAC address of this system, priority, number and operation key of the 
port. Upon receiving the information, the peer compares the information with the information of other 
ports on the peer device to determine the ports that can be aggregated. In this way, the two parties can 
reach an agreement in adding/removing the port to/from a dynamic aggregation group.