Deployment Guide

Table Of Contents
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DellEMC#
S6100 OIR
This section deals with information on the S6100OIR (Online Insertion and Removal) feature.
Online Insertion and Removal of Modules
There are 3 scenarios you may come across with regard to Online Insertion and Removal of Modules:
1. Inserting a module in an empty slot (a module slot that did not have any module-type provision at, and since the last reboot
of the system):
a. QSFP+, and QSFP28 modules can be inserted in the empty module slot without any provisioning.
b. In case of a QSFP28_4CXP module, provision QSFP28_4CXP module-type on the module slot, save the configuration
and reload the system prior to inserting the module in the empty slot.
2. Changing from one module type to another:
a. Remove the previously existing module.
b. Remove the previously existing module-type configuration from the module slot.
c. Provision the new module-type on the module slot, save the configuration and reload the system prior to inserting the
new module.
3. Replacing a faulty module / same module type:
a. Remove the existing module and insert the new module which is of same type. No other configuration changes or system
reloads are required.
NOTE:
The current module-type configuration on a module slot and the module-type configuration on the module slot, at
the time of last reload of the system, can be checked using the "show inventory optional-module" command.
VLAN Interfaces
VLANs are logical interfaces and are, by default, in Layer 2 mode. Physical interfaces and port channels can be members of
VLANs.
For more information about VLANs and Layer 2, see Layer 2 and Virtual LANs (VLANs).
NOTE:
To monitor VLAN interfaces, use Management Information Base for Network Management of TCP/IP-based
internets: MIB-II (RFC 1213).
NOTE: You cannot simultaneously use egress rate shaping and ingress rate policing on the same VLAN.
Dell EMC Networking OS supports Inter-VLAN routing (Layer 3 routing in VLANs). You can add IP addresses to VLANs and use
them in routing protocols in the same manner that physical interfaces are used. For more information about configuring different
routing protocols, refer to the chapters on the specific protocol.
A consideration for including VLANs in routing protocols is that you must configure the no shutdown command. (For routing
traffic to flow, you must enable the VLAN.)
NOTE:
You cannot assign an IP address to the default VLAN, which is VLAN 1 (by default). To assign another VLAN ID to
the default VLAN, use the default vlan-id vlan-id command.
To assign an IP address to an interface, use the following command.
Configure an IP address and mask on the interface.
INTERFACE mode
ip address ip-address mask [secondary]
ip-address mask: enter an address in dotted-decimal format (A.B.C.D). The mask must be in slash format (/24).
secondary: the IP address is the interfaces backup IP address. You can configure up to eight secondary IP addresses.
interface Vlan 10
ip address 1.1.1.2/24
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Interfaces