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Redundancy Groups 1 Through 255

Note: In this release, an SRX-series chassis cluster supports the creation of only one redundancy group beyond redundancy group 0.

You can configure one or more redundancy groups numbered 1 through 255, referred to in this chapter as redundancy group x. Each redundancy group x acts as an independent unit of failover and is primary on only one node at a time.

Each redundancy group x contains one or more redundant Ethernet interfaces. A redundant Ethernet interface is a pseudo interface that contains a pair of physical Gigabit Ethernet interfaces. If a redundancy group is active on node 0, then the child links of all the associated redundant Ethernet interfaces on node 0 are active. If the redundancy group fails over to node 1, then the child links of all redundant Ethernet interfaces on node 1 become active.

On J-series chassis clusters, you can configure multiple redundancy groups to load-share traffic across the cluster (only one additional redundancy group is supported on SRX-series chassis clusters). For example, you can configure some redundancy groups x to be primary on one node and some redundancy groups x to be primary on the other node. You can also configure a redundancy group x in a one-to-one relationship with a single redundant Ethernet interface to control which interface traffic flows through.

When you configure a redundancy group x, you must specify a priority for each node to determine the node on which the redundancy group x is primary. The node with the higher priority is selected as primary. The primacy of a redundancy group x can fail over from one node to the other. When a redundancy group x fails over to the other node, its redundant Ethernet interfaces on that node are active and their interfaces are passing traffic.

Table 43 gives an example of redundancy group x in an SRX-series chassis cluster and indicates the node on which the group is primary. It shows the redundant Ethernet interfaces and their interfaces configured for redundancy group x.

Table 43: Redundancy Groups Example for an SRX-series Chassis Cluster

Group

Primary

Priority

Objects

Interface

Interface

Redundancy group 0

Node 0

Node 0: 254

Routing Engine on node 0

 

Node 1: 2

Routing Engine on node 1

Redundancy group 1

Node 0

Node 0: 254

Redundant Ethernet interface 0

ge-1/0/0

ge-23/0/0

Node 1: 2

Redundant Ethernet interface 1

ge-1/3/0

ge-23/3/0

 

As the example for an SRX-series chassis cluster in Table 43 shows:

Table 44 gives an example of redundancy groups x in a J-series chassis cluster and indicates the node on which each group is primary. It shows the redundant Ethernet interfaces and their interfaces configured for each redundancy group x.

Table 44: Redundancy Groups Example for a J-series Chassis Cluster

Group

Primary

Priority

Objects

Interface

Interface

Redundancy group 0

Node 1

Node 0: 50

Routing Engine on node 0

 

Node 1: 100

Routing Engine on node 1

Redundancy group 1

Node 1

Node 0: 50

Redundant Ethernet interface 0

fe-1/0/0

fe-8/0/0

 

Node 1: 100

Redundant Ethernet interface 1

fe-1/0/1

fe-8/0/1

Redundancy group 2

Node 1

Node 0: 50

Redundant Ethernet interface 2

ge-2/0/0

ge-9/0/0

 
 

Node 1: 100

Redundant Ethernet interface 3

ge-2/0/1

ge-9/0/1

Redundancy group 3

Node 0

Node 0: 100

Redundant Ethernet interface 4

ge-3/0/0

ge-10/0/0

Node 1: 50

Redundant Ethernet interface 5

ge-3/0/1

ge-10/0/1

 
 

As the example for a J-series chassis cluster in Table 44 shows:


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