Hi Jesse,
regarding question 2, EOS and EXOS differ in this regard. While an EOS LAG automatically falls back to individual ports if the LAG cannot be formed, EXOS uses the LAG (port sharing) even if the LAG does not form.
There is a new
LACP Fallback feature in EXOS that allows one port in a dynamic LAG (port sharing) to come up even w/o receiving LACP. But this still uses the LAG configuration, not the physical port configuration.
While EOS uses an additional logical port lag.0.X for the LAG, EXOS re-uses the handle of the physical master port, disabling configuration of non-master member ports. Thus EXOS cannot have differing configurations for the LAG and its ports.
Erik