NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
kbbrf
Jun 05, 2021Aspirant
S3300 ring or fully meshed stacking
Is there any advantage in fully meshing a stack of 4 S3300s?
Let's name the 4 switches A, B, C and D. In a fully meshed config, each switch has 3 direct neighbors. What will be the bandwidth between A and B? Only 10Gb (direct path A-B) or 30 Gb (direct path A-B and indirect paths A-C-B and A-D-B)?
Let's name the 4 switches A, B, C and D. In a fully meshed config, each switch has 3 direct neighbors. What will be the bandwidth between A and B? Only 10Gb (direct path A-B) or 30 Gb (direct path A-B and indirect paths A-C-B and A-D-B)?
2 Replies
- JohnC_VNETGEAR Moderator
Welcome to our community! :)
Stack is a collection of switches in which one switch controls the operation of all switches. May I know what do you want to achieve here?
Regards,
John
NETGEAR Community Team
- kbbrfAspirant
Thanks John,
The objective is to maximize bandwidth between the various switches.
In a ring topology A-B, B-C, C-D, D-A, what is the bandwitdh between A and C ? 10Gb or 20 Gb ?
If I add A-C and B-D (fully meshed), will the bandwidth increase to 30 Gb ? In this case A-C would be a direct link and A-B-C & A-D-C would be two indirect links. How does the stacking logic manage this situation? Are all 3 links equivalent or will A-C be preferred ?
I understand that the master has a controlling role. But does that mean that all traffic has to transit though the master? If A is the master of a ring A-B, B-C, C-A, how will B communicate to C: directly or through A ?
Thanks for your explanations
KH
Related Content
NETGEAR Academy

Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology!
Join Us!