Administrator Guide

Table Of Contents
VLT on Core Switches
You can also deploy VLT on core switches.
Uplinks from servers to the access layer and from access layer to the aggregation layer are bundled in LAG groups with
end-to-end Layer 2 multipathing. This set up requires horizontal stacking at the access layer and VLT at the aggregation layer
such that all the uplinks from servers to access and access to aggregation are in Active-Active Load Sharing mode. This example
provides the highest form of resiliency, scaling, and load balancing in data center switching networks.
The following example shows stacking at the access, VLT in aggregation, and Layer 3 at the core.
The aggregation layer is mostly in the L2/L3 switching/routing layer. For better resiliency in the aggregation, Dell Networking
recommends running the internal gateway protocol (IGP) on the VLTi VLAN to synchronize the L3 routing table across the two
nodes on a VLT system.
VLT Terminology
The following are key VLT terms.
Virtual link trunk (VLT) The combined port channel between an attached device and the VLT peer switches.
VLT backup link The backup link monitors the vitality of VLT peer switches. The backup link sends configurable, periodic
keep alive messages between the VLT peer switches.
VLT interconnect (VLTi) The link used to synchronize states between the VLT peer switches. Both ends must be on
10G or 40G interfaces.
VLT domain This domain includes both the VLT peer devices, VLT interconnect, and all of the port channels in the VLT
connected to the attached devices. It is also associated to the configuration mode that you must use to assign VLT global
parameters.
VLT peer device One of a pair of devices that are connected with the special port channel known as the VLT
interconnect (VLTi).
VLT peer switches have independent management planes. A VLT interconnect between the VLT chassis maintains
synchronization of L2/L3 control planes across the two VLT peer switches. The VLT interconnect uses either 10G or 40G
user ports on the chassis.
A separate backup link maintains heartbeat messages across an out-of-band (OOB) management network. The backup link
ensures that node failure conditions are correctly detected and are not confused with failures of the VLT interconnect. VLT
ensures that local traffic on a chassis does not traverse the VLTi and takes the shortest path to the destination via directly
attached links.
Important Points to Remember
VLT port channel interfaces must be switch ports.
If you include RSTP on the system, configure it before VLT. Refer to Configure Rapid Spanning Tree.
Dell Networking strongly recommends that the VLTi (VLT interconnect) be a static LAG and that you disable LACP on the
VLTi.
Ensure that the spanning tree root bridge is at the Aggregation layer. If you enable RSTP on the VLT device, refer to RSTP
and VLT for guidelines to avoid traffic loss.
If you reboot both VLT peers in BMP mode and the VLT LAGs are static, the DHCP server reply to the DHCP discover offer
may not be forwarded by the ToR to the correct node. To avoid this scenario, configure the VLT LAGs to the ToR and the
ToR port channel to the VLT peers with LACP. If supported by the ToR, enable the lacp-ungroup feature on the ToR
using the lacp ungroup member-independent port-channel command.
If the lacp-ungroup feature is not supported on the ToR, reboot the VLT peers one at a time. After rebooting, verify that
VLTi (ICL) is active before attempting DHCP connectivity.
When you enable IGMP snooping on the VLT peers, ensure the value of the delay-restore command is not less than the
query interval.
When you enable Layer 3 routing protocols on VLT peers, make sure the delay-restore timer is set to a value that allows
sufficient time for all routes to establish adjacency and exchange all the L3 routes between the VLT peers before you enable
the VLT ports.
Only use the lacp ungroup member-independent command if the system connects to nodes using bare metal
provisioning (BMP) to upgrade or boot from the network.
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Virtual Link Trunking (VLT)