Service Manual

1 Member not present
2 Member not present
3 Member not present
4 Member not present
5 Member not present
6 Member not present
[output omitted]
Standalone#show system | grep priority
Master priority : 0
-----------STACK BEFORE CONNECTION----------------
Stack#show system brief
Stack MAC : 00:01:e8:d5:f9:6f
-- Stack Info --
Unit UnitType Status ReqTyp CurTyp Version Ports
---------------------------------------------------
0 Standby online
S4048-ON
1 Management online
S4048-ON
2 Member not present
3 Member not present
4 Member not present
5 Member not present
6 Member not present
7 Member not present
[output omitted]
Stack#show system stack-unit 1 | grep priority
Master priority : 0
Stack#show system stack-unit 2 | grep priority
Master priority : 0
Example of Adding a Standalone with a Lower MAC Address and Equal Priority to a Stack
Stacking LAG
When multiple links are used between stack units, Dell Networking OS automatically bundles them in a stacking LAG to provide
aggregated throughput and redundancy.
The stacking LAG is established automatically and transparently by Dell Networking OS (without user configuration) after
peering is detected and behaves as follows:
The stacking LAG dynamically aggregates; it can lose link members or gain new links.
Shortest path selection inside the stack: If multiple paths exist between two units in the stack, the shortest path is used.
Stacking 860