Manually Configuring a Stack
We recommend that you configure your stack using
Easy Setup, as described in step
9.
However, instead of running Easy Setup, you can configure the
stack parameters manually. After performing step 1
through step 9, perform the following steps as needed:
-
Reboot the switch that will be the master.
-
Optionally, assign slot numbers to all switches in
the stack.
-
Configure node priorities on each slot.
When the stack boots up, the node priority determines
which node will be the master and which node will be the backup. Node priorities
can be from 1 to 99, the lowest numbered slot having the highest priority.
See Configuring the Master, Backup, and Standby Roles.
-
Disable master capability for any nodes that you
do not want to become master nodes.
-
Assign a MAC address to the stack.
-
Optionally, configure a failsafe account for the
stack.
-
Optionally, set a command prompt for the
stack.
Issue the command
configure snmp sysName
stack_name.
If you do not define
your own command prompt, the default command prompt looks similar to
* Slot-6 Stack.9 #, where:
- * indicates a changed and unsaved ExtremeXOS configuration
- 9 is a sequence number indicating the 9th
command to be entered since login
- # indicates that your are logged into the master
node (other nodes display the > symbol)
-
When you have performed all desired configuration steps, reboot the
stack.
-
Verify the configuration,
following the instructions in Verifying the Configuration.
-
Save the ExtremeXOS configuration to every active node in the stack.
On the master node, issue the
command save configuration
config_name, where config_name is a
descriptive name for this configuration.
The stacking-specific
configuration parameters are saved in a file called config_name.cfg to the NVRAM of each node.