

You have now successfully reactivated a suspended interface on your switch through the CLI. (Optional) Press Y for Yes or N for No on your keyboard once the Overwrite file. (Optional) In the Privileged EXEC mode of the switch, save the configured settings to the startup configuration file by entering the following: SG550XG-8F8T#>copy running-config startup-config Note: In this example, the port XG1/0/2 is manually reactivated. To activate an interface that was configured to be active but was shut down by the system, enter the following: SG550XG-8F8T#set interface active

To manually reactivate an interface that was shut down, follow the steps: You have now successfully configured the automatic errdisable recovery settings on your switch through the CLI.

Enter the exit command to go back to the Privileged EXEC mode: SG550XG-8F8T(config)#exit

#Enable ssh on cisco switch how to#
Note: To learn how to access an SMB switch CLI through SSH or Telnet, click here. If you have configured a new username or password, enter the credentials instead.
#Enable ssh on cisco switch password#
The default username and password is cisco/cisco. Applicable Devices | Firmware VersionĬonfigure Link Flap Prevention Settings Enable Link Flap Prevention This article provides instructions on how to enable the Link Flap Prevention feature, configure Automatic ErrDisable Recovery settings, and reactivate a suspended interface through the Command Line Interface (CLI) of the switch. The interface will become active again only if specifically enabled by the system administrator. A syslog message or Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) trap is sent to alert regarding link flap and port shutdown. This mechanism also provides time to debug and locate root cause for flapping. It stabilizes the network topology by automatically setting the ports that experience excessive link flap events to err-disable state ports. Link flap prevention mechanism minimizes the disruption to switch and network operation in a link flap situation. The cause for link flapping can be intermittent or permanent. The common cause is usually related to bad, unsupported, or non-standard cable or Small Form-Factor Pluggable (SFP), or related to other link synchronization issues. Link flap is a situation in which a physical interface on the switch continually goes up and down, three or more times a second for duration of at least 10 seconds.
