About this task
After you create a template for a stack, you can edit each stack member switch
template to reconfigure the ports. If you change your physical stack, add or remove
switches, you must create a new stack template to match the new physical stack.
When you create a new stack template, you must also perform a configuration update.
If the template does not match the physical stack exactly, the configuration update
will fail. The following are examples of common changes that can occur to a stack,
with the actions you need to take for each example.
-
When the primary and standby
switches reverse roles:
If the primary and standby
switches change their roles (for example, as the result of a CLI command), after
a delay of approximately 3 minutes, the Devices List updates to show the new
primary and standby switches. To display the Devices List, navigate to
. See
Device List Views for more
information.
-
If you remove the primary switch
from a stack, the stack retains the MAC address of the removed primary,
resulting in duplicate MAC addresses for the stack and the standalone former
primary switch.
If you need to remove the
primary switch from a stack, you must perform the following steps to prevent
duplicate MAC addresses:
-
Delete the entire stack
from ExtremeCloud IQ.
-
Perform the following
CLI command:
no
member {n} where n is the unit
number of the primary switch.
-
Enter the serial numbers
of the stack members and the standalone switch in ExtremeCloud IQ.
-
Recreate the stack
template to reflect the change.
-
Add a new switch to an existing stack:
To add a new switch to an existing stack, you must create a new stack template
that matches the number of switches in the new physical stack.
-
Add an existing switch to a stack:
Use the previous procedure to add an existing switch to a stack. You must
cable the switch to the physical stack, and then create a stack template
matching the new stack.
-
Remove a switch from one stack
and add it to another stack:
To move a switch from one stack
to another stack, you must disconnect the switch from the original stack, then
re-cable it in the new stack. Create two new stack templates, one to match the
diminished stack configuration, and one to match the new stack
configuration.
-
When a stack member goes offline:
If a stack member is offline
(is powered down but remains a member of the stack), ExtremeCloud IQ updates the
Devices List to show that member as Disconnected.
When the offline stack member comes back online, the Devices List is updated to
show it as Connected. To display the Devices List, navigate to
.
-
Manage a switch that has been uncabled from a stack:
If a stack member is uncabled,
ExtremeCloud IQ updates the Devices List to show that member as Disconnected.
This action alerts you that there might be a problem with this switch. If this
switch has been accidentally or inadvertently uncabled, you can then re-cable
it. ExtremeCloud IQ updates the Devices List to show the switch is working
correctly.
-
Remove a switch from a stack in ExtremeCloud IQ:
-
To remove stack members
from the ExtremeCloud IQ database (but not from the actual physical
stack), select Remove Stack Members from the Actions
drop-down list in the Devices List window.
-
Select the check box for the stack member or members that you want to
remove and then select Remove.
Note
If you accidentally
remove a primary stack member, you have only removed it from
ExtremeCloud IQ. It remains as the operational physical primary of
the stack, and you can onboard it again.
-
Split stacks:
When you reconfigure a physical
stack so that some of the switches become independent stacks, you create a split
stack. If no CLI commands are issued to explain the change, the stack still
reports having the original number of switches, with the removed switches
showing as not connected. For example, Stack A has Switches 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and
6. Then someone creates a split stack by cabling Switches 5 and 6 into their
stack, Stack B. At this point, both Stack A and Stack B think that all six
switches belong to them. A show switch command on Switch 1 shows six members
(two with a management status of
Disconnected). A
show switch command on Switch 5 shows six members (four with a management status
of
Disconnected).
If the primary of the new smaller 2-member
stack tries to communicate with ExtremeCloud IQ as an independent stack,
ExtremeCloud IQ ignores this communication because it still recognizes the
service tag for this switch as belonging to the original stack. Any
communication from this switch is ignored because this new primary switch
has a different MAC Address. If the 3rd and 4th stack members rejoin the
original stack, they again display as valid and healthy stack members in the
Devices List. .
-
If you want the stacks
to remain split, in the Devices List, select Remove Stack
Members from the Actions
drop-down list.
-
Select the check boxes
for the stack members to remove from the stack, and select Remove.
The switches you
removed display in the Devices List as a separate stack. See
Device List Views for
more information.
What to do next
If necessary, create a new switch stack template to reflect any of the above
changes.