03-04-2022 06:37 PM - edited 03-04-2022 06:39 PM
Switch A and Switch B are already configured as in the diagram.
Trying to add a switch stack upstream of A and B
Currently, interface 1/2 cabling does not exist. and 1/1 has IP address 10.0.0.150/24
Solutions.....
1. On switchstack Configure SVI on Vlan 10 and (switchport access VLAN 10) down 1/1 and 1/2?
2. Or configure an IP address on interface 1/1 or 1/2 ?
3. is there a way to implement a port channel?
How does the spanning tree behave? What is recommended solution?
03-04-2022 06:52 PM
Keep it simple: Remove the link between Switch A and Switch B.
The uplinks from the access switch to the 3750X stack should be going to the switch members (one each) and then etherchannel.
Forming a "pyramid" is just "old school" and "textbook" cases. In large deployment, no one does that anymore.
03-04-2022 06:56 PM
The best approach is to make it longer stable.
1. Move the VLAN Layer3 Interface towards Stack 10.0.0.254 VLAN 10
2. Make a Trunk port between Stack switch and Switch A (if you have more ports, make a port-channel in case 1 link fail other can take care) spread the links stack different switch,
3. Make a Trunk port between Stack switch and Switch B (same case as above)
4. Remove the Link between Switch A and B, this will have no spanning-tree loops.
Note: the suggestion made based on the information, thinking all in the same Campus Lan.
Other notes: Maybe a typo i guess here, your Pc left side IP address and VLAN 10 IP address of SwitchB is the same?
03-04-2022 07:00 PM
Other notes: Maybe a typo i guess here, your Pc left side IP address and VLAN 10 IP address of SwitchB is the same?
--Yes same subnet, vlan 10 (10.0.0.0/24) all over.
03-04-2022 07:03 PM
I mean your PC 10.0.0.10/24 also same IP configured vlan 10 on switch B 10.0.0.10/24
03-04-2022 07:20 PM
Typo, yup. Thanks.
03-04-2022 07:29 PM
make it streamline below diagram help you : since you got opportunity correct it ( so you can use IP address in good way)
03-05-2022 09:45 AM
I too would recommend a topology like @balaji.bandi shows.
Additionally, would try to avoid running the same VLAN across multiple (separate - like your switches A and B) switches. Would also recommend cross stack links from you stack up to the "core router" (might be L2 PO or L3 p2p).
One of the major feature of a stack is to minimize single points of failure.
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