202
ï‚¡ Full duplex/high speed
ï‚¡ Full duplex/low speed
ï‚¡ Half duplex/high speed
ï‚¡ Half duplex/low speed
ï‚· Consider the ports in up state with the same port attributes and class-two configurations as the
reference port as candidate Selected ports, and set all others in the Unselected state.
ï‚· Static aggregation limits the number of Selected ports in an aggregation group. When the number
of the candidate Selected ports is under the limit, all the candidate Selected ports become Selected
ports. When the limit is exceeded, set the candidate Selected ports with smaller port numbers in the
Selected state and those with greater port numbers in the Unselected state.
ï‚· If all the member ports are down, set their states to Unselected.
ï‚· Set the ports that cannot aggregate with the reference port to the Unselected state.
NOTE:
If a static aggregation group has reached the limit on Selected ports, any port joins the
roup is placed in
the Unselected state to avoid traffic interruption on the current Selected ports. Avoid this situation,
however, because it may cause the aggregation state of a port to change after a reboot.
Dynamic aggregation mode
LACP is automatically enabled on all member ports in a dynamic aggregation group.
In a dynamic aggregation group, the following rules apply:
ï‚· A Selected port can receive and transmit LACPDUs.
ï‚· An Unselected port can receive and send LACPDUs only if it is up and with the same configurations
as those on the aggregate interface.
In a dynamic aggregation group, the system sets the ports to Selected or Unselected state using the
following workflow:
1. The local system (the actor) negotiates with the remote system (the partner) to determine port state
based on the port IDs on the end with the preferred system ID. The following is the detailed
negotiation procedure:
ï‚¡ Compare the system ID (comprising the system LACP priority and the system MAC address) of
the actor with that of the partner. The system with the lower LACP priority wins out. If they are the
same, compare the system MAC addresses. The system with the smaller MAC address wins out.
ï‚¡ Compare the port IDs of the ports on the system with the smaller system ID. A port ID comprises
a port LACP priority and a port number. First compare the port LACP priorities. The port with the
lower LACP priority wins out. If two ports are with the same LACP priority, compare their port
numbers. The port with the smaller port ID, that is, the port with smaller port number, is selected
as the reference port.
ï‚¡ If a port (in up state) is with the same port attributes and class-two configuration as the reference
port, and the peer port of the port is with the same port attributes and class-two configurations
as the peer port of the reference port, consider the port as a candidate selected port; otherwise
set the port to the Unselected state.
ï‚¡ The number of selected ports that an aggregation group can contain is limited. When the
number of candidate selected ports is under the limit, all the candidate selected ports are set to
Selected state. When the limit is exceeded, the system selects the candidate selected ports with
smaller port IDs as the selected ports, and set other candidate selected ports to Unselected