11-09-2022 04:05 PM
I got two Cisco 2960 8 port switch, model WS-C2960-8TC-S
1 can they do stack?
2 how to wire?
3 which firmware?
4 how to upgrade?
thank you so much.
Solved! Go to Solution.
11-09-2022 04:56 PM - edited 11-09-2022 04:58 PM
@davidnghk wrote:
1 can they do stack?
Yes and no. No, they don't but they can with Switch Clustering.
@davidnghk wrote:
3 which firmware?
@davidnghk wrote:
4 how to upgrade?
IOS Upgrade on Catalyst Switches 29xx, 3560/3750 -- Easy as Pi
11-09-2022 04:56 PM - edited 11-09-2022 04:58 PM
@davidnghk wrote:
1 can they do stack?
Yes and no. No, they don't but they can with Switch Clustering.
@davidnghk wrote:
3 which firmware?
@davidnghk wrote:
4 how to upgrade?
IOS Upgrade on Catalyst Switches 29xx, 3560/3750 -- Easy as Pi
11-10-2022 06:33 AM
Thank you so much for replying @Leo Laohoo
wow, "Switch Clustering" is a very new concept to me, may I ask, will it work if
1. I only have "one Command-switch" + "one standby command switches", there is no other "member switch", these two switch are connected by one Ethernet cable.
2. computer A has two NIC card (NIC B and NIC C).
3. "NIC B" connect to the "Command-switch", and "NIC C" connect to "standby command switches", and for example both switch connect to different ISP to access the internet.
4. so if the "Command-switch" fail, and the "standby command switches" will take up the task and computer A still able to access internet?
11-10-2022 02:26 PM
@davidnghk wrote:
wow, "Switch Clustering" is a very new concept to me
Switch Clustering is an old concept going back 15 years (or more). Switch Clustering is also very IOS version dependent. Newer version has this feature disabled due to security vulnerability (Cisco IOS and IOS XE Software Cluster Management Protocol Remote Code Execution Vulnerability).
@davidnghk wrote:
1. I only have "one Command-switch" + "one standby command switches", there is no other "member switch", these two switch are connected by one Ethernet cable.
2. computer A has two NIC card (NIC B and NIC C).
3. "NIC B" connect to the "Command-switch", and "NIC C" connect to "standby command switches", and for example both switch connect to different ISP to access the internet.
4. so if the "Command-switch" fail, and the "standby command switches" will take up the task and computer A still able to access internet?
Yes and no. And both answers have nothing to do with switch clustering.
Does NIC B and NIC C have two separate IP addresses?
11-11-2022 04:05 AM
thank you @Leo Laohoo , I am new to networking, so everything is new to me.
yes, NIC B and NIC C has different IP, but in the same subnet.
and the the 2 switch I have are 2960, but sort of different model.
one is WS-C2960-8TC-L, the other one is WS-C2960-8TC-S.
so can they work together as "Command-switch" and "standby command switches",
and no other member switch,
to form a failover link?
11-11-2022 04:34 PM
@davidnghk wrote:
yes, NIC B and NIC C has different IP, but in the same subnet.
Yes, they can failover but in a crude way.
11-11-2022 06:57 PM
@Leo Laohoowhat do you mean by in a crude way?
11-11-2022 08:27 PM
If each NIC has their own IP addresses and one of the two switches fail, for obvious reasons, the NIC homed to the failed switch will no longer ping.
However, the other NIC will still work.
So, failover will work. It is just crude.
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide