Chapter 17 Link Aggregation
XGS2210 Series User’s Guide
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CHAPTER 17
Link Aggregation
17.1  Link Aggregation Overview 
This chapter shows you how to logically aggregate physical links to form one logical, higher-bandwidth 
link.
Link aggregation (trunking) is the grouping of physical ports into one logical higher-capacity link. You 
may want to trunk ports if for example, it is cheaper to use multiple lower-speed links than to under-utilize 
a high-speed, but more costly, single-port link. However, the more ports you aggregate then the fewer 
available ports you have. A trunk group is one logical link containing multiple ports.
The beginning port of each trunk group must be physically connected to form a trunk group. 
17.1.1  What You Can Do
• Use the Link Aggregation Status screen (Section 17.2 on page 179) to view ports you have configured 
to be in the trunk group, ports that are currently transmitting data as one logical link in the trunk group 
and so on.
• Use the Link Aggregation Setting screen (Section 17.3 on page 181) to configure to enable static link 
aggregation.
• Use the Link Aggregation Control Protocol screen (Section 17.3.1 on page 184) to enable Link 
Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP). 
17.1.2  What You Need to Know
The Switch supports both static and dynamic link aggregation.
Note: In a properly planned network, it is recommended to implement static link aggregation 
only. This ensures increased network stability and control over the trunk groups on your 
Switch.
See Section 17.4.1 on page 187 for a static port trunking example.
Dynamic Link Aggregation 
The Switch adheres to the IEEE 802.3ad standard for static and dynamic (LACP) port trunking.
The IEEE 802.3ad standard describes the Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) for dynamically 
creating and managing trunk groups. 
When you enable LACP link aggregation on a port, the port can automatically negotiate with the ports 
at the remote end of a link to establish trunk groups. LACP also allows port redundancy, that is, if an