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BLADEOS 6.5.2 Application Guide
BMD00220, October 2010
Chapter 24: Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol  

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Active-Active Redundancy
In an active-active configuration, shown in 
two switches provide redundancy for each 
other, with both active at the same time. Each switch processes traffic on a different subnet. When a 
failure occurs, the remaining switch can process traffic on all subnets.
For a configuration example, see 
.
Figure 42   
Active-Active Redundancy
Virtual Router Group
The virtual router group ties all virtual routers on the switch together as a single entity. As members 
of a group, all virtual routers on the switch (and therefore the switch itself), are in either a master or 
standby state.
A VRRP group has the following characteristics:

When enabled, all virtual routers behave as one entity, and all group settings override any 
individual virtual router settings.

All individual virtual routers, once the VRRP group is enabled, assume the group’s tracking 
and priority.

When one member of a VRRP group fails, the priority of the group decreases, and the state of 
the entire switch changes from Master to Standby.
Each VRRP advertisement can include up to 16 addresses. All virtual routers are advertised within 
the same packet, conserving processing and buffering resources.
Internet
Internet
Enterprise
Routing Switch
Switch 1
Switch 2
Servers
Active (subnet A and C)
Active (subnet B and D)