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Migrate from 1GB to 10GB uplinks - help?

Migrate from 1GB to 10GB uplinks - help?

Frank
Contributor II
I have a simple setup - two core switches (8800s), several edge switches (460s) connected like this: 8800s are running 16.1.3.6-patch1-9, 460-1 is on 15.4.1.3, 460-2 is on 15.6.1.4.

50e1f0c24ad444b68639a7f4721868da_RackMultipart20170308-76557-z2351h-LACP2_inline.png


My problem is that the 460s are on 1GB fiber (ports 55,57) and I need to upgrade them to 10GB while everything stays up and running, i.e. the devices connected to the 460s don't lose access to the network.
The end goal is that the 10GB uplinks also need to be in ports 55,57 (for sanity's sake) Ideally, the corresponding ports in the 8800 should also stay the same (sanity!), but I could be persuaded to use different ports.

If I understand correctly, I can't just replace the SFPs one by one because of port speeds and sharing configs/mismatches.
Physically, the two 460s are right on top of each other, so I could run something between them and use that as an alternate path, but I also hear that loops are deadly. I don't think I can easily define that as a 460-ISC MLAG, as I'd have to put the ports on the 8800 side into sharing mode, affecting vlan-port associations to the 460. (Let's say vlan 1 goes to 460-1 vlan 2 goes to 460-2, let's say on the 8800s port 1:11 goes to 460-1, port 1:12 goes to 460-2. What all would die if I group 1:11 and 1:12? At least all vlans pointing to 1:12 would have an issue, right?)

On the other hand, I'm not currently running spanning-tree. If I connect the 460-1/2 with a gig-ether (or two , shared) in a non-MLAG setup, make sure all vlans that exist on both switches are defined to go to to both switches (and the connection between the 460s) and define spanning-tree on all the vlans, would that get me to a point where I can just rip out one 460's fiber uplink, replace it with 10G, then do the other 460, then disconnect the link between the 460s and kill off STP?

I've never configured STP on Extreme switches, btw. Especially not with share groups and an MLAG.

So, how can I pull this off without downtime (or downtime in the "few seconds" range)? Would STP be viable? Is there something better I can do during the fiber/SFP replacements?

Thanks for your help!
Frank
19 REPLIES 19

Erik_Auerswald
Contributor II
Hi Frank,

MLAG and STP do not work well together in EXOS, see e.g. Can I combine MLAG and STP? from GTAC Knowledge. Thus the simple way to have STP block one of the uplinks during migration is NOT supported.

IMHO you should investigate Michal's proposed procedure. Edit: see GTAC Knowledge article How to configure Active/Standby port or LAG feature in EXOS.

Erik

Thanks, Drew.

Drew_C
Valued Contributor III
I gotcha, Erik 

There is a bad typo in the above post. Seems I cannot edit the post any more. 😞

I wanted to write:
Thus the simple way to have STP block one of the uplinks during migration is NOT supported.

Michal_Rz
New Contributor III
I would do it like that: configure redundand link (software) on first x460 between shared port and some templorary port to second 460. Make sure all vlans are configured correctly. Then connect them by templorary link, disable and disconnect main links 1g, replace them with 10G and enable both. At the end disconnect templorary links and unconfigure redundant link to clean after work. Next same thing with second 460. No need to make it hard with STP.

GTM-P2G8KFN