User Guide    122
Configuring LAG Configuration Example
3 
Configuration Example
3.1  Network Requirements
As shown below, hosts and servers are connected to Switch A and Switch B, and heavy 
traffic is transmitted between the two switches. To achieve high speed and reliability 
of data transmission, users need to improve the bandwidth and redundancy of the link 
between the two switches.
3.2  Configuration Scheme
LAG function can bundle multiple physical ports into one logical interface to increase 
bandwidth and improve reliability. In this case, we take LACP as an example. 
As shown below, you can bundle up to eight physical ports into one logical aggregation 
group to transmit data between the two switches, and respectively connect the ports of 
the groups. In addition, another two redundant links can be set as the backup. To avoid 
traffic bottleneck between the servers and Switch B, you also need to configure LAG on 
them to increase link bandwidth. Here we mainly introduce the LAG configuration between 
the two switches.
Figure 3-1 Network Topology
Switch A Switch B
Hosts
Gi1/0/1 Gi1/0/1
Gi1/0/10
.
.
.
Gi1/0/10
Servers
The overview of the configuration is as follows:
1)  Considering there are multiple devices on each end, configure the load-balancing 
algorithm as ‘SRC MAC+DST MAC’.
2)  Specify the system priority for the switches. Here we choose Switch A as the dominate 
device and specify a higher system priority for it.
3)  Add ports 1/0/1-10 to the LAG and set the mode as LACP. 
4)  Specify a lower port priority for ports 1/0/9-10 to set them as the backup ports. When 
any of ports 1/0/1-8 is down, the backup ports will automatically be enabled to transmit 
data.
Demonstrated with TL-SG2210P, the following sections provide configuration procedure in 
two ways: using the GUI and using the CLI.
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