NETGEAR 7300S Network Router User Manual


 
User Manual for the NETGEAR 7300S Series Layer 3 Managed Switch Software
12-12 Managing Switch Stacks
202-10088-01, March 2005
Removing a Unit from the Stack
1. Make sure the redundant stack connection is in place and functional. All stack members
should be connected in a logical ring.
2. Power down the unit to be removed.
3. Disconnect stack cables.
4. If unit is not to be replaced, reconnect the stack cable from the stack member above to the
stack member below the unit being removed.
5. Remove unit from the rack.
6. If desired, remove the unit from the configuration by issuing the command:
no member <unit-id>
Adding a Unit to an Operating Stack
1. Make sure the redundant stack connection is in place and functional. All stack members
should be connected in a logical ring.
2. Preconfigure the new unit, if desired.
3. Install new unit in the rack. (Assumes installation below the bottom-most unit, or above the
top-most unit).
4. Disconnect the redundant stack cable that connects the last unit in the stack back up to the first
unit in the stack at the position in the ring where the new unit is to be inserted.
5. Connect this cable to the new unit, following the established order of “stack up” to “stack
down” connections
6. Power up the new unit. Verify, by monitoring the master unit console port, that the new unit
successfully joins the stack by issuing the show switch command. The new unit should always
join as a “member” (never as master; the existing master of the stack should not change).
7. If the code version of the newly added member is not the same as the existing stack, update the
code as described in section Upgrading Firmware.
Replacing a Stack Member with a New Unit
There are two possible situations here. First, if you replace a stack member of a certain model
number with another unit of the same model, follow the process below: