Cisco Systems 200 Switch User Manual


 
Port Management
Configuring Link Aggregation
117 Cisco Small Business 200 Series Smart Switch Administration Guide
9
The device supports two modes of load balancing:
By MAC Addresses—Based on the destination and source MAC addresses
of all packets.
By IP and MAC Addresses—Based on the destination and source IP
addresses for IP packets, and destination and source MAC addresses for
non-IP packets.
LAG Management
In general, a LAG is treated by the system as a single logical port. In particular, the
LAG has port attributes similar to a regular port, such as state and speed.
The device supports eight LAGs.
Every LAG has the following characteristics:
All ports in a LAG must be of the same media type.
To add a port to the LAG, it cannot belong to any VLAN except the default
VLAN.
Ports in a LAG must not be assigned to another LAG.
No more than eight ports are assigned to a static LAG and no more than 16
ports can be candidates for a dynamic LAG.
All the ports in a LAG must have auto-negotiation disabled, although the
LAG can have auto-negotiation enabled.
When a port is added to a LAG, the configuration of the LAG is applied to
the port. When the port is removed from the LAG, its original configuration
is reapplied.
Protocols, such as Spanning Tree, consider all the ports in the LAG to be
one port.
Default Settings and Configuration
Ports are not members of a LAG and are not candidates to become part of a LAG.