To clarify, a port channel is a virtual interface between two devices, whereas a port group is a collection of ethernet ports on a single switch.
Now in regards to the configuration, you should be able to see the association if you use the show interface status command on the interface in question.
Ethernet 1/1/41 is up, line protocol is down Port is part of Port-channel 41 Hardware is Eth, address is 68:4f:63:58:20:e0 Pluggable media not present
Interface index is 54 Internet address is not set Mode of IPv4 Address Assignment: not set Interface IPv6 oper status: Disabled MTU 9216 bytes, IP MTU 9184 bytes LineSpeed 0, Auto-Negotiation off Flowcontrol rx on tx off ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout: 60 Queuing strategy: fifo
I can see the port 41 being part of a channel 41 but is not part of any port-group. When will someone create a port-group?
My understanding is that, if you want to create an aggregated link, you first create a channel (virtual interface) then you create a port-group where you add the ports you want to aggregate and finally you add that port-group to the channel. Is my thinking correct?
Is the command, for example, port-group 1/1/1 only used for changing the speed modes of a group of ports? I'm starting to understand that port-channel and port-group are unrelated in the sense that you don't need to create a port-group when you want to aggregate links (port-channel), unless you want all the aggregated links to use a different speed mode than the default one.
Hi, I'm also understanding the same as you. I think the port-group command is not only used to change the speed modes of a port group. When you create a port group, multiple physical interfaces are grouped into a single virtual interface. Instead of configuring individually, this virtual interface can be used to simplify network configuration and management. I don't think it would be necessary to create a port group to bundle connections using a port channel. port-channel interface is created using the port-channel command, and the physical interfaces are added to the port-channel.
Thank you Erman. Are the port-groups below created manually or are there by default?
System Type: S4148U-ON
dell# show port-group
Port-group Mode Ports FEM
port-group1/1/1 Eth 10g-4x 1 2 3 4 -
port-group1/1/2 Eth 10g-4x 5 6 7 8 -
port-group1/1/3 Eth 10g-4x 9 10 11 12 -
port-group1/1/4 Eth 10g-4x 13 14 15 16 -
port-group1/1/5 Eth 10g-4x 17 18 19 20 -
port-group1/1/6 Eth 10g-4x 21 22 23 24 -
port-group1/1/7 Eth 100g-1x 25 -
port-group1/1/8 Eth 100g-1x 26 -
port-group1/1/9 Eth 100g-1x 29 -
port-group1/1/10 Eth 100g-1x 30 -
I'm starting to think these groups are fixed and can not be manually, created. Because when I do:
dell(config)# port-group Node/Slot/PortGroup(1-10) Port-group id
dell(config)# port-group 1/1/1 dell(conf-pg-1/1/1)# end Exit to the exec Mode exit Exit from current mode mode Port-group mode no Negate a command or set its defaults show Show configuration
DELL-Chris H
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February 8th, 2023 12:00
Igano,
To clarify, a port channel is a virtual interface between two devices, whereas a port group is a collection of ethernet ports on a single switch.
Now in regards to the configuration, you should be able to see the association if you use the show interface status command on the interface in question.
Let me know if this helps.
igano
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February 9th, 2023 01:00
Hello Chris
dell# show interface ethernet 1/1/41
Ethernet 1/1/41 is up, line protocol is down
Port is part of Port-channel 41
Hardware is Eth, address is 68:4f:63:58:20:e0
Pluggable media not present
Interface index is 54
Internet address is not set
Mode of IPv4 Address Assignment: not set
Interface IPv6 oper status: Disabled
MTU 9216 bytes, IP MTU 9184 bytes
LineSpeed 0, Auto-Negotiation off
Flowcontrol rx on tx off
ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout: 60
Queuing strategy: fifo
I can see the port 41 being part of a channel 41 but is not part of any port-group. When will someone create a port-group?
My understanding is that, if you want to create an aggregated link, you first create a channel (virtual interface) then you create a port-group where you add the ports you want to aggregate and finally you add that port-group to the channel. Is my thinking correct?
Thank you
igano
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35 Posts
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February 9th, 2023 02:00
Is the command, for example, port-group 1/1/1 only used for changing the speed modes of a group of ports? I'm starting to understand that port-channel and port-group are unrelated in the sense that you don't need to create a port-group when you want to aggregate links (port-channel), unless you want all the aggregated links to use a different speed mode than the default one.
DELL-Erman O
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February 9th, 2023 04:00
Hi, I'm also understanding the same as you. I think the port-group command is not only used to change the speed modes of a port group. When you create a port group, multiple physical interfaces are grouped into a single virtual interface. Instead of configuring individually, this virtual interface can be used to simplify network configuration and management. I don't think it would be necessary to create a port group to bundle connections using a port channel. port-channel interface is created using the port-channel command, and the physical interfaces are added to the port-channel.
igano
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35 Posts
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February 9th, 2023 04:00
Thank you Erman. Are the port-groups below created manually or are there by default?
System Type: S4148U-ON
dell# show port-group
Port-group Mode Ports FEM
port-group1/1/1 Eth 10g-4x 1 2 3 4 -
port-group1/1/2 Eth 10g-4x 5 6 7 8 -
port-group1/1/3 Eth 10g-4x 9 10 11 12 -
port-group1/1/4 Eth 10g-4x 13 14 15 16 -
port-group1/1/5 Eth 10g-4x 17 18 19 20 -
port-group1/1/6 Eth 10g-4x 21 22 23 24 -
port-group1/1/7 Eth 100g-1x 25 -
port-group1/1/8 Eth 100g-1x 26 -
port-group1/1/9 Eth 100g-1x 29 -
port-group1/1/10 Eth 100g-1x 30 -
I'm starting to think these groups are fixed and can not be manually, created. Because when I do:
dell(config)# port-group
Node/Slot/PortGroup(1-10) Port-group id
dell(config)# port-group 1/1/1
dell(conf-pg-1/1/1)#
end Exit to the exec Mode
exit Exit from current mode
mode Port-group mode
no Negate a command or set its defaults
show Show configuration
I do not see an option to create a new group.
DELL-Marco B
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February 9th, 2023 06:00
Hello,
yes port groups are fixed by default, as for example in this model
Dell EMC SmartFabric OS10 User Guide Release 10.5.0 | Dell Costa Rica
Thanks