Quick question, we have 4 Cisco 3750G's currently stacked is it possible to remove the last switch from the config without physically taking down all the switches?
When we "built" the config, it was extremely simple and damn near idiot proof, now I need to take one out of the equation and am curious if anyone has done this in a live environment.
I've been told you can simply remove the cables, and pull the switch but I don't know anyone who has done this first hand so its not something i'm really joyful to try.
I wonder if this will work
# no switch 4 provision 3750G
# exit
# wr mem
I'm by far no expert, so any help would be appreciated plus if I can avoid a midnight migration I want to.
I've been told you can simply remove the cables, and pull the switch but I don't know anyone who has done this first hand so its not something i'm really joyful to try.
I wonder if this will work
# no switch 4 provision 3750G
# exit
# wr mem
I'm by far no expert, so any help would be appreciated plus if I can avoid a midnight migration I want to.
Assuming they are 3750 - non "E" version they have a 32Gbps backplane. If the cable is disco'ed it WILL continue to work with the 3 that are left, at half that capacity, until you connect the cables back up properly.
As a consultant, I would do this during an outage window. Especially without being able to see the configs, cabling and so forth I would not be able to promise anything.
The only way *I* would do it during production is if the customer fully understood the risks and would still accept it. Assuming cabling, configs and so forth are solid I'd give it a 95% chance of success.
btw you'd issue that command after the switch is removed. IMHO, it is a config clean up type thing. If you added a 4th switch after that one was removed, the switches IOS would automatically set the proper paramters.
btw you'd issue that command after the switch is removed. IMHO, it is a config clean up type thing. If you added a 4th switch after that one was removed, the switches IOS would automatically set the proper paramters.
Just let me know if you have any other questions. 3750s are solid and straight forward to work with.
If you're going to power them off...
If you don't have switch priority commands...
Recommend you use them OR
Power them up in the specific order you want them to come up.
I'd do a "show switch" and verify that switch 1, is the switch you think it is...switch 2...etc. A lot of folks just turn that crap on and end up with switches all out of order from their physical rack order.
Setting their priority so the right one becomes master is ideal and then switch 2 takes it spot...etc. If you just power them up in order it'll do the same thing really.
Yeah i'm gonna check on the configs here in a bit, gonna grab a bite to eat first.
Thanks for your help, i'll definitely hit you up if I have any questions.
wow...I can't wait till I get some experience and knowledge with Cisco....
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