EasyManuals Logo

Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series Administration Guide

Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series
1814 pages
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Page #439 background imageLoading...
Page #439 background image
10-3
Software Configuration Guide—Release IOS XE 3.5.0E and IOS 15.2(1)E
OL_28731-01
Chapter 10 Configuring Supervisor Engine Redundancy Using RPR and SSO on Supervisor Engine 6-E and Supervisor
About Supervisor Engine Redundancy
The redundant supervisor engine pauses the startup sequence after basic system initialization, and in the
event that the active supervisor engine fails, the redundant supervisor engine becomes the new active
supervisor engine.
In a supervisor engine switchover, traffic is disrupted because in the RPR mode all of the physical ports
restart since there is no state maintained between supervisor engines relating to module types and
statuses. When the redundant supervisor engine completes its initialization, it reads hardware
information directly from the module.
SSO Operation
SSO is supported in Cisco IOS Release 12.2(20)EWA and later releases. When a redundant supervisor
engine runs in SSO mode, the redundant supervisor engine starts up in a fully-initialized state and
synchronizes with the persistent configuration and the running configuration of the active supervisor
engine. It subsequently maintains the state on the protocols listed below, and all changes in hardware
and software states for features that support stateful switchover are kept in synchronization.
Consequently, it offers zero interruption to Layer 2 sessions in a redundant supervisor engine
configuration.
Because the redundant supervisor engine recognizes the hardware link status of every link, ports that
were active before the switchover remain active, including the uplink ports. However, because uplink
ports are physically on the supervisor engine, they will be disconnected if the supervisor engine is
removed.
If the active supervisor engine fails, the redundant supervisor engine become active. This newly active
supervisor engine uses existing Layer 2 switching information to continue forwarding traffic. Layer 3
forwarding is delayed until the routing tables have been repopulated in the newly active supervisor
engine.
SSO supports stateful switchover of the following Layer 2 features. The state of these features is
preserved between both the active and redundant supervisor engines:
• 802.3
• 802.3u
• 802.3x (Flow Control)
• 802.3ab (GE)
• 802.3z (Gigabit Ethernet including CWDM)
• 802.3ad (LACP)
• 802.1p (Layer 2 QoS)
• 802.1q
• 802.1X (Authentication)
• 802.1D (Spanning Tree Protocol)
• 802.3af (Inline power)
• PAgP
• VTP
• Dynamic ARP Inspection
• DHCP snooping
• IP source guard

Table of Contents

Other manuals for Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series

Questions and Answers:

Question and Answer IconNeed help?

Do you have a question about the Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series and is the answer not in the manual?

Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series Specifications

General IconGeneral
SeriesCatalyst 4500 Series
CategorySwitch
Layer SupportLayer 2, Layer 3
Form FactorModular chassis
StackableNo
Chassis Slots3, 6, 7, 10
Power Supply OptionsAC, DC
RedundancyPower supply, Supervisor engine
Network ManagementCisco IOS Software CLI, SNMP, Cisco Prime Infrastructure
FeaturesSecurity, QoS
Port DensityUp to 384 ports per chassis
Security Features802.1X, ACLs, DHCP Snooping, Dynamic ARP Inspection, IP Source Guard
Supervisor Engine8-E

Related product manuals