Mpu roles, Irf member id, Irf port – H3C Technologies H3C S12500 Series Switches User Manual

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When devices form an IRF fabric, they elect a master to manage the IRF fabric, and all other devices back

up the master. When the master device fails, the other devices elect a new master automatically. For more
information about master election, see "

Master election

."

MPU roles

Each IRF member device has one or two MPUs, which play different roles, as follows:

Role Description

Global active MPU

Active MPU of the master device. You configure and manage the
entire IRF fabric at the CLI of the global active MPU.

Local active MPU

Active MPU that manages the local device. This MPU has the
following responsibilities:

Manages the local device, including synchronizing

configuration between the local active MPU and the local

standby MPU, processing protocol packets, and creating and

maintaining route entries.

Handles IRF related events, such as master election and

topology collection.

Standby MPU

For the global active MPU, all other MPUs, including local active
MPUs, are global standby MPUs.
If a member device has two MPUs, the one backing up the local

MPU is the local standby MPU from the perspective of the member

device.

IRF member ID

An IRF fabric uses member IDs to uniquely identify and manage its members. This member ID information
is included as the first part of interface numbers and file paths to uniquely identify interfaces and files in

an IRF fabric. For example, after you assign a device with member ID 2 to an IRF fabric, the name of

interface GigabitEthernet 3/0/1 changes to GigabitEthernet 2/3/0/1, and the file path

slot1#flash:/test.cfg changes to chassis2#slot1#flash:/test.cfg.
If two devices have the same IRF member ID, they cannot form an IRF fabric. If the IRF member ID of a
device has been used in an IRF fabric, the device cannot join the fabric.
By default, the standby MPU is automatically assigned the same ID as the active MPU. You can change

the standby MPU ID of a member device to quickly recover IRF configuration for a device that has only

one MPU as described in "

Fast-restoring IRF configuration for a one-MPU member

."

IRF port

An IRF port is a logical interface for the connection between IRF member devices. Each IRF-capable
device supports two IRF ports.
In standalone mode, the IRF ports are named IRF-port 1 and IRF-port 2.
In IRF mode, the IRF ports are named IRF-port n/1 and IRF-port n/2, where n is the member ID of the

device. The two IRF ports are referred to as "IRF-port 1" and "IRF-port 2" in this book for simplicity.

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