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Cisco 500 Series Administration Guide

Cisco 500 Series
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Administration: Stack Management
Stack Changes
79 Cisco 500 Series Stackable Managed Switch Administration Guide
5
Connecting a New Unit
When a unit is inserted into the stack, a stack topology change is triggered. The
unit ID is assigned (in case of auto numbering), and the unit is configured by the
master.
One of the following cases can occur when connecting a new unit to an existing
stack:
• No duplicate unit IDs exist.
- Units with user-defined IDs retain their unit ID.
- Units with automatically-assigned IDs retain their unit ID.
- Factory default units receive unit IDs automatically, beginning from the
lowest available ID.
• One or more duplicate unit IDs exist. Auto numbering resolves conflicts and
assigns unit IDs. In case of manual numbering, only one unit retains its unit ID
and the other(s) are shutdown.
• The number of units in the stack exceeds the maximum number of units
allowed. The new units that joined the stack are shut down, and a SYSLOG
message is generated and appears on the master unit.
The following shows an example of auto numbering when a master-enabled unit
joins the stack. There are two units with unit ID = 1. The master selection process
selects the best unit to be the master unit. The best unit is the unit with the higher
uptime in segments of 10 minutes. The other unit is made the backup.
Auto-numbered Master-enabled Unit

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Cisco 500 Series Specifications

General IconGeneral
ModelCisco 500 Series
CategorySwitch
MountingRack-mountable
ManagementWeb-based, CLI, SNMP
Ports24, 48
Port Speed10/100/1000 Mbps
PoE SupportAvailable on some models
Switching CapacityUp to 176 Gbps
MAC Address Table Size16, 000 entries
SecurityACLs, 802.1X
Quality of Service (QoS)Yes
DimensionsVaries by model
WeightVaries by model
Humidity10% to 90% non-condensing
Power SupplyInternal
Power ConsumptionVaries by model
Jumbo Frame SupportUp to 9216 bytes

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