Netgear GS728TS GS7xxTS-TPS Hardware Installation Guide - Page 9

Stacking, GS7xxTPS model LEDs: Power and Status LED, FAN status LED, Master LED, LED - drivers

Page 9 highlights

GS728TS, GS728TPS, GS752TS, and GS752TPS Smart Switch Hardware Installation Guide • GS7xxTPS model LEDs: Power and Status LED, FAN status LED, Master LED, LED mode LED and Max PoE LED. • Stack ID LED to display stack member ID (1-6). • Store-and-Forward transmission to remove bad packets from the network. • Full-duplex IEEE 802.3x pause frame flow control. • Active flow control to minimize packet loss and frame drops. • Half-duplex backpressure control. • Per port LEDs and power LED. • Internal open frame power supply. • Standard NETGEAR 7xx series chassis. • NETGEAR Green product series power-saving features: • Automatic power consumption adjustment based on the RJ-45 cable length. • Per port automatic power down when the port link is down. • IEEE802.3az, EEE (Energy Efficient Ethernet) compliance. Stacking A stack can be controlled and managed from a single unit called the master unit. Any other unit member of the stack is named stack slave member. In particular, firmware can be downloaded from the stack master to the other units in the stack. A unit serving as Stack Master runs the fully operational software of a switch. In addition, it runs the master part of the Distributed Switching Application that configures and manages all other units in the stack. Generally, the master operates the remote Slave's low-level drivers, through the Distributed Switching application part that is running in the context of the Slave. During the Stacking setup, the switches will auto-select one as the Stacking Master. All other devices are named as slave stack members, and assigned a unique Unit ID. One of the slave units is designated as the backup master. The backup master acts as a slave stack master, but can become a stack master in the event of failure of the stack master. In the default configuration, the master and backup master are assigned unit IDs of 1 and 2, respectively. The administrator can use the Web interface to configure different ID assignments. The Stack Master provides a Single point of control and management as well as a single interface in which to control and manage the stack. Switch software is downloaded separately for each stack member. However, all units in the stack must be running the same software version. A stack unit can operate in one of the following Modes: • Standalone unit runs as a general switch. The standalone unit does not run the stacking application until it is connected to a stack. Chapter 1. Introduction | 9

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • 27
  • 28
  • 29
  • 30
  • 31
  • 32
  • 33
  • 34
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • 40
  • 41
  • 42

Chapter 1.
Introduction
|
9
GS728TS, GS728TPS, GS752TS, and GS752TPS Smart Switch Hardware Installation Guide
GS7xxTPS model LEDs: Power and Status LED, FAN status LED, Master LED, LED
mode LED and Max PoE LED.
Stack ID LED to display stack member ID (1-6).
Store-and-Forward transmission to remove bad packets from the network.
Full-duplex IEEE 802.3x pause frame flow control.
Active flow control to minimize packet loss and frame drops.
Half-duplex backpressure control.
Per port LEDs and power LED.
Internal open frame power supply.
Standard NETGEAR 7xx series chassis.
NETGEAR Green product series power-saving features:
Automatic power consumption adjustment based on the RJ-45 cable length.
Per port automatic power down when the port link is down.
IEEE802.3az, EEE (Energy Efficient Ethernet) compliance.
Stacking
A stack can be controlled and managed from a single unit called the master unit. Any other
unit member of the stack is named stack slave member.
In particular, firmware can be downloaded from the stack master to the other units in the
stack.
A unit serving as Stack Master runs the fully operational software of a switch. In addition, it
runs the master part of the Distributed Switching Application that configures and manages all
other units in the stack. Generally, the master operates the remote Slave’s low-level drivers,
through the Distributed Switching application part that is running in the context of the Slave.
During the Stacking setup, the switches will auto-select one as the Stacking Master. All other
devices are named as slave stack members, and assigned a unique Unit ID. One of the slave
units is designated as the backup master. The backup master acts as a slave stack master,
but can become a stack master in the event of failure of the stack master. In the default
configuration, the master and backup master are assigned unit IDs of 1 and 2, respectively.
The administrator can use the Web interface to configure different ID assignments. The Stack
Master provides a Single point of control and management as well as a single interface in
which to control and manage the stack.
Switch software is downloaded separately for each stack member. However, all units in the
stack must be running the same software version.
A stack unit can operate in one of the following Modes:
Standalone unit runs as a general switch. The standalone unit does not run the stacking
application until it is connected to a stack.