Understanding Switch Clusters; Command Switch Characteristics - Cisco Catalyst 2950 Software Manual

Desktop switch software configuration guide
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Understanding Switch Clusters

Understanding Switch Clusters
A switch cluster is a group of connected Catalyst switches that are managed as a single entity. In a switch
cluster, 1 switch must be the command switch and up to 15 switches can be member switches. The total
number of switches in a cluster cannot exceed 16 switches. The command switch is the single point of
access used to configure, manage, and monitor the member switches. Cluster members can belong to
only one cluster at a time.
The benefits of clustering switches include:
For other clustering benefits, see the
page
Refer to the release notes for the list of Catalyst switches eligible for switch clustering, including which
ones can be command switches and which ones can only be member switches, and the required software
versions.

Command Switch Characteristics

A Catalyst 2950 command switch must meet these requirements:
Note
Catalyst 2950 Desktop Switch Software Configuration Guide
5-2
Management of Catalyst switches regardless of their interconnection media and their physical
locations. The switches can be in the same location, or they can be distributed across a Layer 2
network. Cluster members are connected through the management VLAN of the command switch
according to the connectivity guidelines described in the
Candidates and Members" section on page
Command-switch redundancy if a command switch fails. One or more switches can be designated
as standby command switches to avoid loss of contact with cluster members. A cluster standby group
is a group of standby command switches.
Management of a variety of Catalyst switches through a single IP address. This conserves on IP
addresses, especially if you have a limited number of them. All communication with the switch
cluster is through the command switch IP address.
1-7.
It is running Cisco IOS Release 12.0(5.2)WC(1) or later.
It has an IP address.
It has Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) version 2 enabled (the default).
It is not a command or member switch of another cluster.
It is connected to the standby command switches and member switches through its management
VLAN.
No access lists have been defined for the switch because access lists can restrict access to a switch.
Access lists are not usually used in configuring the switch, except for the CMP-NAT-ACL access
list that is created when a device is configured as the command switch.
We strongly recommend that the highest-end, command-capable switch in the cluster be the
command switch:
If your switch cluster has a Catalyst 3550 switch, that switch should be the command switch.
"Automatic Discovery of Cluster
5-4.
"Advantages of Using CMS and Clustering Switches" section on
Chapter 5
Clustering Switches
78-11380-03

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