Ports and trunking, Introduction, Ports on the switch – NEC INTELLIGENT L2 SWITCH N8406-022A User Manual

Page 28: Port trunk groups

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Ports and trunking 28


Ports and trunking

Introduction

The first part of this chapter describes the different types of ports used on the switch. This information is useful in
understanding other applications described in this guide, from the context of the embedded switch/server
environment.

For specific information on how to configure ports for speed, auto-negotiation, and duplex modes, see the port
commands in the Command Reference Guide.

The second part of this chapter provides configuration background and examples for trunking multiple ports
together. Trunk groups can provide super-bandwidth, multi-link connections between switches or other trunk-
capable devices. A trunk group is a group of links that act together, combining their bandwidth to create a single,
larger virtual link. The switch provides trunking support for the five external ports, two crosslink ports, and 16 server
ports.

Ports on the switch

The following table describes the Ethernet ports of the switch, including the port name and function.

NOTE: The actual mapping of switch ports to NIC interfaces is dependant on the operating system software,
the type of server blade, and the enclosure type. For more information, see the User’s Guide.

Table 7 Ethernet switch port names

Port number

Port alias

1 Downlink1

2 Downlink2

3 Downlink3

4 Downlink4

5 Downlink5

6 Downlink6

7 Downlink7

8 Downlink8

9 Downlink9

10 Downlink10

11 Downlink11

12 Downlink12

13 Downlink13

14 Downlink14

15 Downlink15

16 Downlink16

17 XConnect1

18 XConnect2

19 Mgmt

20 Uplink1

21 Uplink2

22 Uplink3

23 Uplink4

24 Uplink5

Port trunk groups

When using port trunk groups between two switches, you can create an aggregate link operating at up to five
Gigabits per second, depending on how many physical ports are combined. The switch supports up to 12 trunk
groups per switch, each with up to six ports per trunk group.

The trunking software detects broken trunk links (link down or disabled) and redirects traffic to other trunk members
within that trunk group. You can only use trunking if each link has the same configuration for speed, flow control,
and auto-negotiation.

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