Netgear WC7500 - ProSAFE® Wireless Controller 用户手册

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Manage Stacking and Redundancy 
298
ProSAFE Wireless Controller 
When the primary controller that went down and for which the redundant controller took over 
comes back up and is stable, a switchback occurs automatically, in which case ownership of 
the controller IP address is returned to the primary controller that came back up. The 
redundant controller reassumes its passive position, and redundancy is once again available 
for all primary controllers in the redundancy group.
Note:
When a redundancy failover occurs, WiFi clients might experience a 
service interruption of a few seconds.
Requirements and Restrictions for N:1 Redundancy
These are the requirements and restrictions for N:1 redundancy to function correctly:
All controllers in a redundancy group must be in the same management VLAN and IP 
subnet.
The primary controllers must be stacked.
If three or four controllers are in the same redundancy group, you must configure one 
controller as the redundant controller and all other controllers as primary controllers.
All controllers in the redundancy group must run the same firmware version. If the 
firmware versions do not match, redundancy does not work.
The licenses on the redundant controller must match those on the primary controller that 
supports the largest number of licenses. For example, in a redundancy group with two 
primary controllers, if one primary controller supports a license for 10 access points and 
the other primary controller supports a license for 50 access points, the redundant 
controller must support a license for 50 access points. If the licenses do not match, 
redundancy does not work.
For the relationship of each primary controller with the redundant controller, you must 
configure a unique VRRP ID that is also different from any other VRRP IDs that might be 
used for other purposes in the network. You also must configure a unique local controller 
IP address for each controller in the redundancy group.
When a failover occurs and the redundant controller takes over for a primary controller, 
redundancy is no longer available for the other primary controllers in the redundancy 
group.
Example of an N:1 Redundancy Configuration
The following figure shows an N:1 configuration with three stacked controllers and one 
redundant controller before a failover occurs.