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Dell PowerEdge FN I/O Module Configuration Guide 9.10(0.0)

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How the LACP is Implemented on an Aggregator

The LACP provides a means for two systems (also called partner systems) to exchange information through dynamic negotiations to aggregate two or more ports with common physical characteristics to form a link aggregation group.

  • NOTE: A link aggregation group is referred to as a port channel by the Dell Networking OS.

A LAG provides both load-sharing and port redundancy across stack units. An Aggregator supports LACP for auto-configuring dynamic LAGs. Use CLI commands to display LACP information, clear port-channel counters, and debug LACP operation for auto-configured LAG on an Aggregator.

The Dell Networking OS implementation of LACP is based on the standards specified in the IEEE 802.3: “Carrier sense multiple access with collision detection (CSMA/CD) access method and physical layer specifications.”

LACP functions by constantly exchanging custom MAC protocol data units (PDUs) across local area network (LAN) Ethernet links. The protocol packets are only exchanged between ports that you configure as LACP-capable.

  • NOTE: In Standalone, VLT, and Stacking modes, you can configure a maximum of 16 members in port-channel 128. In PMUX mode, you can have multiple port-channels with up to 16 members per channel.

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