04-17-2015 10:39 AM - edited 03-07-2019 11:36 PM
Just curious because I can't seem to determine the answer from readings.
I understand that in a failure situation on Chassis A supervisor 1, Chassis B supervisor 1 takes over. However, what if Chassis A Sup 1 remains in a failed state and Chassis B Sup 1 fails? Does it then fail down to Chassis B Sup 2? Or does the entire thing go down?
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04-17-2015 11:21 AM
Hi Richard,
i dont think the whole switch will go down since it falls back to Chassis A Supervisor 2 and Chassis B supervisor 2 will be VSS standby Sup and Inchassis active for Chassis 2.
Please read the Supervisor Switchover Events under the below link for a better understanding.
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/products/collateral/switches/mgx-8800-series-switches/white_paper_c11-729039.html
Hope this helps you.
"Rating encourages particpation"
Thanks
Madhu.
04-17-2015 11:15 AM
Have not tested this before, but this link shows the Z pattern switchover. So, it appears that if sup 1 in switch 1 fails, sup 1 in switch 2 will be active. if sup 1 in switch 2 fails sup 2 in switch 1 will be active. and finally if sup 2 in switch 1 fails sup 2 in switch 2 will be active.
see figure-2
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/products/collateral/switches/mgx-8800-series-switches/white_paper_c11-729039.html
HTH
04-17-2015 11:21 AM
Hi Richard,
i dont think the whole switch will go down since it falls back to Chassis A Supervisor 2 and Chassis B supervisor 2 will be VSS standby Sup and Inchassis active for Chassis 2.
Please read the Supervisor Switchover Events under the below link for a better understanding.
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/products/collateral/switches/mgx-8800-series-switches/white_paper_c11-729039.html
Hope this helps you.
"Rating encourages particpation"
Thanks
Madhu.
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