08-12-2016 12:49 PM - edited 03-08-2019 06:59 AM
Hello
I have a doubt , are this modules of the 6509 hot swap?
Supervisor Engine 720 10GE VS-S720-10G ,, this is the standby supervisor and I need to remove it, can I do this on production?.
I will have 2 6509 in vss with one supervisor each, if the supervisor active on the 6509 goes down, will I loose all the 6509? or it will keep working?
thanks!
08-12-2016 01:13 PM
Hi,
The module and sup on the 6500 series are how swap able. Even though they are how swap able I recommend doing it during non-production hours.
I will have 2 6509 in vss with one supervisor each, if the supervisor active on the 6509 goes down, will I loose all the 6509? or it will keep working?
If VSS is configured correctly, when you remove the active sup the stand-by sup will take over packet forwarding.
HTH
08-12-2016 05:21 PM
Hello Reza &
Regarding the second question, let me rephrase it:
1 2
6509 ----- 6509
Active <
ON
08-12-2016 05:31 PM
If the VSS standby chassis or supervisor engine fails, no switchover is required. The failed chassis performs recovery action by reloading the supervisor engine.
The VSL links are unavailable while the failed chassis recovers. After the chassis reloads, it becomes the new VSS standby chassis and the VSS reinitializes the VSL links between the two chassis.
The switching modules on the failed chassis are unavailable during recovery, so the VSS operates only with the MEC links that terminate on the VSS active chassis. The bandwidth of the VSS is reduced until the failed chassis has completed its recovery and become operational again. Any devices that are connected only to the failed chassis experience an outage.
I hope this has answered your question.
08-12-2016 10:23 PM
6509 (1) will reload and join back as VSS standby. It won't be able to send and receive traffic during that. It is recommended to have connectivity to both chassis when using VSS(MEC) so that no outage for connected system occurs when this happens.
HTH
Madhu.
08-12-2016 03:04 PM
If the VSS active chassis or supervisor engine fails, the VSS initiates a stateful switchover (SSO) and the former VSS standby supervisor engine assumes the VSS active role. The failed chassis performs recovery action by reloading the supervisor engine.
If the VSS standby chassis or supervisor engine fails, no switchover is required. The failed chassis performs recovery action by reloading the supervisor engine.
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