Quality of service, Load sharing, Esrp-aware switches – Extreme Networks Summit 300-48 User Manual

Page 19: Software licensing

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Software Licensing

Summit 300-48 Switch Software User Guide

19

Quality of Service

ExtremeWare has Quality of Service (QoS) features that support IEEE 802.1p, MAC QoS, and four
queues. These features enable you to specify service levels for different traffic groups. By default, all
traffic is assigned the “normal” QoS policy profile. If needed, you can create other QoS policies and
rate-limiting access control lists and apply them to different traffic types so that they have different
maximum bandwidth, and priority.

NOTE

For more information on Quality of Service, see Chapter 11, “Quality of Service (QoS)”.

Load Sharing

Load sharing allows you to increase bandwidth and resiliency by using a group of ports to carry traffic
in parallel between systems. The sharing algorithm allows the switch to use multiple ports as a single
logical port. For example, VLANs see the load-sharing group as a single virtual port. The algorithm also
guarantees packet sequencing between clients.

NOTE

For information on load sharing, see Chapter 4, “Configuring Ports on a Switch”.

ESRP-Aware Switches

Extreme switches that are not running ESRP, but are connected on a network that has other Extreme
switches running ESRP are ESRP-aware. When ESRP-aware switches are attached to ESRP-enabled
switches, the ESRP-aware switches reliably perform fail-over and fail-back scenarios in the prescribed
recovery times. No configuration of this feature is necessary.

If Extreme switches running ESRP are connected to layer 2 switches that are not manufactured by
Extreme Networks (or Extreme switches that are not running ExtremeWare 4.0 or above), the fail-over
times seen for traffic local to the segment may appear longer, depending on the application involved
and the FDB timer used by the other vendor’s layer 2 switch. As such, ESRP can be used with layer 2
switches from other vendors, but the recovery times vary.

The VLANs associated with the ports connecting an ESRP-aware switch to an ESRP-enabled switch
must be configured using an 802.1Q tag on the connecting port, or, if only a single VLAN is involved, as
untagged using the protocol filter

any

. ESRP will not function correctly if the ESRP-aware switch

interconnection port is configured for a protocol-sensitive VLAN using untagged traffic.

Software Licensing

Summit 300-48 switches support Advanced Edge licensing.

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