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connecting switches together
kyleid1
Why would you connect two switches together? what are the benefits?
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koz24
Is this a homework question?
Mooseboost
Redundancy
Mitechniq
24 + 24 = 48 with a trunk port in between or with Cisco Stackwise technology it's like one big switch.
DoubleNNs
Need more ports.
Physical segmentation. (SwitchA has hosts connected that serve PurposeA. SwitchB has hosts connected that serve PurposeB.)
Costs. Some switches are expensive. You can connect some hosts/devices to less expensive/feature intensive switches and others to the expensive switches.
Organization. (Prettier. Easier to wrap brain around.)
Redundancy.
So that physical failure doesn't take down a whole segment/network.
Distance limitations. (Purpose of Fabric Extender switches - FEXes)
Lots of reasons. I'm sure the actual net admins on the site can think of more/better reasons.
mikeybinec
vlans--extend groups to another area
Techie19
At work, of the main reasons we have more than one switch connected together (stacked) is for redundancy. If one fails the other is ready to take over. For example, we would have two 24 ports Cisco 3650 access layer switches stacked. One will be partially or fully populated. If it were to become defective, the second switch will be available right there and then to take over. Just a matter of connecting patch cables to this other switch. Same as to why there are two power supplies on them. One guys out, the other is available to keep it up, minimizing outage time. Key thing I've noticed at work, redundancy is huge. Same goes for the UPS's. Hope this helped.
NetworkNewb
koz24
wrote:
»
Is this a homework question?
definitely
Chev Chellios
NetworkNewb
wrote:
»
definitely
Exactly. Why bother registering and posting here though when a simple Google search would suffice?
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