HP 6125G HP 6125G & 6125G/XG Blade Switches IRF Command Reference-R210 - Page 15

irf member renumber

Page 15 highlights

Auto upgrade Mac persistent : yes : always # Change the priority of the current master (member ID 3) to 16. system-view [Sysname] irf member 3 priority 16 # Change the priority of member 2 to 32. system-view [Sysname] irf member 2 priority 32 irf member renumber Syntax irf member member-id renumber new-member-id View undo irf member member-id renumber System view Default level 3: Manage level Parameters member-id: Specifies the current ID of an IRF member switch. The value range is 1 to 4. new-member-id: Assigns a new ID to the IRF member switch. The value range is 1 to 4. Description Use irf member renumber to change the IRF member ID of a switch. Use undo irf member renumber to set the IRF member ID of a switch to 1. By default, the IRF member ID is 1. CAUTION: In an IRF fabric, changing IRF member IDs might cause undesirable configuration changes and even data loss. Before you do that, back up the configuration and make sure you fully understand the impact on your network. For example, all member switches in an IRF fabric are the same model. If you swapped the IDs of any two members, their interface settings would also be swapped. To create an IRF fabric, you must assign a unique IRF member ID to each switch. Assigning IRF member IDs before the IRF fabric is formed. To prevent any undesirable configuration change or data loss, avoid changing member IDs after the IRF fabric is formed. The new member ID takes effect at a reboot. After the switch reboots, the settings on all member-ID related physical resources (including common physical network ports) are removed and require reconfiguration, regardless of whether you have saved the configuration. To cancel the change before you reboot the member switch, use the irf member renumber command rather than its undo form. In the command, set the new member ID to be the same as the old member ID. Examples # Change the member ID of an IRF member from 1 to 3. 12

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12
Auto upgrade
: yes
Mac persistent
: always
# Change the priority of the current master (member ID 3) to 16.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] irf member 3 priority 16
# Change the priority of member 2 to 32.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] irf member 2 priority 32
irf member renumber
Syntax
irf member
member-id
renumber
new-member-id
undo irf member
member-id
renumber
View
System view
Default level
3: Manage level
Parameters
member-id
: Specifies the current ID of an IRF member switch. The value range is 1 to 4.
new-member-id
: Assigns a new ID to the IRF member switch. The value range is 1 to 4.
Description
Use
irf member renumber
to change the IRF member ID of a switch.
Use
undo irf member renumber
to set the IRF member ID of a switch to 1.
By default, the IRF member ID is 1.
CAUTION:
In an IRF fabric, changing IRF member IDs might cause undesirable configuration changes and even data
loss. Before you do that, back up the configuration and make sure you fully understand the impact on your
network. For example, all member switches in an IRF fabric are the same model. If you swapped the IDs
of any two members, their interface settings would also be swapped.
To create an IRF fabric, you must assign a unique IRF member ID to each switch.
Assigning IRF member IDs before the IRF fabric is formed. To prevent any undesirable configuration
change or data loss, avoid changing member IDs after the IRF fabric is formed.
The new member ID takes effect at a reboot. After the switch reboots, the settings on all member-ID
related physical resources (including common physical network ports) are removed and require
reconfiguration, regardless of whether you have saved the configuration.
To cancel the change before you reboot the member switch, use the
irf member renumber
command
rather than its
undo
form. In the command, set the new member ID to be the same as the old member ID.
Examples
# Change the member ID of an IRF member from 1 to 3.