Automatically Adding or Replacing Nodes in a
Stack
You can easily add or replace nodes in a stack.
Connecting a new node to a stack automatically triggers the following tasks in a
stack:
- Adds New Nodes—When a new
switch is connected to a stack, the switch is automatically:
- Assigned the lowest
available slot number.
- Set as stacking
master-capability if the stack has only one master-capable switch (the
master itself) and the switch is directly connected to the current stack
master. Otherwise, the new switch is not made master-capable.
- Assigned the stack MAC
address.
- Connected port configured
for stacking (Summit X450-G2 and X460-G2 with attached VIM-2ss or VIM-2q
modules.only).
Note
All switches, other than the Summit X450-G2 or X460-G2 (with VIM),
require that you configure stacking on the stacking ports manually
(
configure stacking-support stack-port [stack-ports | all] selection [native {v80 |
V160} | V320 |V400 {alternative-configuration} | help} | alternate]).
- Rebooted, which then
causes the switch to join the stack.
- Incompatible ExtremeXOS
Check—Checks for and resolves incompatible ExtremeXOS software versions
of stack nodes. If the new switch is running an incompatible version, the
version is reconciled by running the synchronize {slot
slotid} command for that switch
causing the new switch to align with the stack master.
- License Mismatch
Check—Checks for and resolves software license mismatches between all
master-capable nodes. The following command is issued: configure stacking {node-address
node-address | slot
slot-number} license-level [core | advanced-edge | edge].
Note
License mismatches due to
installing feature licenses cannot be resolved automatically. The node is
left in the failed state.
To start automatic integration into an existing stack, phycially connect the new switch to the
stack. For information about cabling, see ExtremeSwitching and Summit Switches: Hardware Installation Guide for Switches Using ExtremeXOS 21.1 or Later.
To manually add or replace a node, see Manually Adding Nodes to a Stack.