HP (Hewlett-Packard) series 2500 Switch User Manual


 
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Optimizing Port Usage Through Traffic Control and Port Trunking
Port Trunking
Optimizing Port Usage
Through Traffic Control and
Half-Duplex and/or Different Port Speeds Not Allowed in LACP
Trunks. The ports on both sides of a trunk must be configured for the same
speed and for full-duplex (FDx). In most cases,HP recommends the ing. The
802.3ad LACP standard specifies a full-duplex (FDx) requirement for LACP
trunking.
A port configured as LACP passive and not assigned to a port trunk can be
configured to half-duplex (HDx). However, in any of the following cases, a
port cannot be reconfigured to an HDx setting:
If a port is set to LACP Active, you cannot configure it to HDx.
If a port is already a member of a static or dynamic LACP trunk, you cannot
configure it to HDx.
If a port is already set to HDx, the switch does not allow you to configure
it for a static or dynamic LACP trunk.
Dynamic/Static LACP Interoperation: A port configured for dynamic
LACP can properly interoperate with a port configured for static (Trk1) LACP,
but any ports configured as standby LACP links will be ignored.
Trunk Group Operation Using the Trunk Option
This method creates a trunk group that operates independently of specific
trunking protocols and does not use a protocol exchange with the device on
the other end of the trunk. With this choice, the switch simply uses the SA/DA
method of distributing outbound traffic across the trunked ports without
regard for how that traffic is handled by the device at the other end of the
trunked links. Similarly, the switch handles incoming traffic from the trunked
links as if it were from a trunked source.
Use the Trunk option when you are trying to establish a trunk group between
the Switch 2512 or 2524 and another device, but the other devices trunking
operation fails to interoperate properly with LACP or FEC trunking configured
on the Switch 2512 or 2524..
Trunk Operation Using the FEC Option
This is the most flexible method for distributing traffic over trunked links
when connecting to devices that use the FEC (Fast EtherChannel
®
) technol-
ogy. FEC trunks offer the following benefits:
Provide trunked connectivity to a FEC-compliant server, switch, or router.
Enable quick convergence to remaining links when a failure is detected
on a trunked port link.