Setup Guide
Example: Migrating an IPv4 VRRP Group from VRRPv2 to VRRPv3
NOTE: Carefully following this procedure, otherwise you might introduce dual master switches issues.
To migrate an IPv4 VRRP Group from VRRPv2 to VRRPv3:
1 Set the backup switches to VRRP version to both.
Dell_backup_switch1(conf-if-gi-1/1-vrid-100)#version both
Dell_backup_switch2(conf-if-gi-1/2-vrid-100)#version both
2 Set the master switch to VRRP protocol version 3.
Dell_master_switch(conf-if-gi-1/1-vrid-100)#version 3
3 Set the backup switches to version 3.
Dell_backup_switch1(conf-if-gi-1/1-vrid-100)#version 3
Dell_backup_switch2(conf-if-gi-1/2-vrid-100)#version 3
Assign Virtual IP addresses
Virtual routers contain virtual IP addresses congured for that VRRP group (VRID). A VRRP group does not transmit VRRP packets until
you assign the Virtual IP address to the VRRP group.
To activate a VRRP group on an interface (so that VRRP group starts transmitting VRRP packets), congure at least one virtual IP address
in a VRRP group. The virtual IP address is the IP address of the virtual router and does not require the IP address mask.
You can congure up to 12 virtual IP addresses on a single VRRP group (VRID).
The following rules apply to virtual IP addresses:
• The virtual IP addresses must be in the same subnet as the primary or secondary IP addresses congured on the interface. Though a
single VRRP group can contain virtual IP addresses belonging to multiple IP subnets congured on the interface, Dell EMC Networking
recommends conguring virtual IP addresses belonging to the same IP subnet for any one VRRP group.
– For example, an interface (on which you enable VRRP) contains a primary IP address of 50.1.1.1/24 and a secondary IP address of
60.1.1.1/24. The VRRP group (VRID 1) must contain virtual addresses belonging to either subnet 50.1.1.0/24 or subnet 60.1.1.0/24, but
not from both subnets (though Dell EMC Networking OS allows the same).
• If the virtual IP address and the interface’s primary/secondary IP address are the same, the priority on that VRRP group MUST be set
to 255. The interface then becomes the OWNER router of the VRRP group and the interface’s physical MAC address is changed to
that of the owner VRRP group’s MAC address.
• If you congure multiple VRRP groups on an interface, only one of the VRRP Groups can contain the interface primary or secondary IP
address.
• On a stack system, if a force failover is performed on a master stack unit, the VRRP virtual addresses are disabled. To re-enable VRRP,
execute the mac-address-table station-move refresh-arp command.
Conguring a Virtual IP Address
To congure a virtual IP address, use the following commands.
1 Congure a VRRP group.
INTERFACE mode
vrrp-group vrrp-id
The VRID range is from 1 to 255.
2 Congure virtual IP addresses for this VRID.
INTERFACE -VRID mode
virtual-address ip-address1 [...ip-address12]
The range is up to 12 addresses.
Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP)
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