Users Guide

Stack Master Election
The stack elects a master and standby unit at bootup time based on two criteria.
Unit priorityUser-congurable. The range is from 1 to 14. A higher value (14) means a higher priority. The default is 1. By
removing the stack-unit priority using the
no stack-unit priority command, you can set the priority back to the default
value of zero. The unit with the highest priority is elected the master management unit; the unit with the second highest priority
is elected the standby unit.
MAC address (in case of priority tie) — The unit with the higher MAC value becomes the master unit. The stack takes the
MAC address of the master unit and retains it unless it is reloaded.
To view which switch is the stack master, enter the show system command. The following example shows sample output from an
established stack.
A change in the stack master occurs when:
You power down the stack master or bring the master switch oine.
A failover of the master switch occurs.
You disconnect the master switch from the stack.
When a stack reloads and all the units come up at the same time; for example, when all units boot up from ash, all units participate
in the election and the master and standby are chosen based on the priority or MAC address.
When the units do not boot up at the same time, such as when some units are powered down just after reloading and powered up
later to join the stack, they do not participate in the election process even though the units that boot up late may have a higher
priority congured. This happens because the master and standby have already been elected, hence the unit that boots up late joins
only as a member.
When an up and running standalone unit or stack is merged with another stack, based on election, the losing stack reloads and the
master unit of the winning stack becomes the master of the merged stack. For more details, see sections Add Units to an Existing S-
Series Stack and Remove Units or Front End Ports from a Stack. It is possible to reset individual units to force them to give up the
management role or reload the whole stack from the CLI to ensure a fully synchronized bootup.
Example of Viewing Stack Members
Dell#show system brief
Stack MAC : 00:01:e8:8c:53:32
Reload Type : normal-reload [Next boot : normal-reload]
-- Stack Info --
Unit UnitType Status ReqTyp CurTyp Version Ports
-----------------------------------------------------------------
0 Member not present
1 Management online S4810 S4810 4810-8-3-12-1447 64
2 Standby online S4810 S4810 4810-8-3-12-1447 64
3 Member online S4810 S4810 4810-8-3-12-1447 64
4 Member online S4810 S4810 4810-8-3-12-1447 64
5 Member not present
6 Member not present
7 Member not present
8 Member not present
9 Member not present
10 Member not present
Virtual IP
You can manage the stack using a single IP, known as a virtual IP, that is retained in the stack even after a failover.
The virtual IP address is used to log in to the current master unit of the stack. Both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are supported as virtual
IPs.
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Stacking