Advanced Traffic Management Guide K/KA/KB.15.15

Solution:
Identify root cause. Possible reasons for a member not joining an existing stack are:
The switch being added has already been a member of another stack and has a different
stack ID.
The maximum number of switches is already configured.
The switch being added has been statically provisioned, but switch type and MAC address
in the configuration do not match the switch being added.
There is a problem with the stack cable.
There is a problem with the stack physical cabling. (illegal topology).
Problem:
The entire stack does not come up after a boot.
Solution:
There are several reasons why all members do not join the stack:
There is a problem with the stack cable.
Physical cabling was changed.
Stack booted on incorrect configuration.
One or more of the switches has a hardware problem (for example, bad power supply, back
stacking module, corrupt flash).
Problem:
One or more of the members keeps rebooting and does not join the stack.
Possible reasons:
An unresponsive member.
Heartbeat loss—a stack that has a member no longer in the stack or a member failing after
joining the stack.
Illegal topology.
Problem:
After initial boot sequence, the activity and Link LEDs of an interface are not on and the ports are
not passing traffic.
Solutions:
Identify the “inactive fragment” and provide alternatives for recovery.
Verify that all OOBMs are connected so that there is uninterrupted access.
Problem:
After a reboot, the selected Command or Standby are not the expected switches.
Solutions:
Check to see if the log files provide a reason why the Commander and Standby were chosen and
which rule they matched.
Troubleshooting stacking 305