Troubleshoot a mismatched stack-ID

This is an example of a stack that has two members with three more members that have been strictly provisioned, following the deterministic method of initial installation.

Viewing a stack with 3 unjoined switches

switch(config)# show stack

Stack ID         : 00031cc1-de4d87c0
MAC Address      : 1cc1de-4dc765
Stack Topology   : Chain
Stack Status     : Active
Uptime           : 0d 0h 2m
Software Version : KA.15.05.0000x

Mbr
ID  Mac Address   Model                                 Pri Status
--- -----------   ------------------------------------- --- -----------
1   1cc1de-4d87c0 HP J9573A 3810-24G-PoE+-2SFP+ Switch  200 Standby
2   1cc1de-4dc740 HP J9573A 3810-24G-PoE+-2SFP+ Switch  128 Commander
3   1cc1de-4dbd40 HP J9575A 3810-24G-2SFP+ Switch       128 Not Joined
4   1cc1de-4d79c0 HP J9576A 3810-48G-4SFP+ Switch       175 Not Joined
5   1cc1de-4da900 HP J9576A 3810-48G-4SFP+ Switch       128 Not Joined

When powering on switch 3, it does not join the stack.

The stack ports for the new switch appear online, however, the show stacking command shows that the switch has not been recognized.

Viewing the switch is not recognized

switch(config)# show stacking stack-ports member 1,2

Member 1

Member Stacking Port  State Peer Member   Peer Port
------ -------------- ----- ------------- -------
1      1              Down  0             0
1      2              Up    2             1
1      3              Down  0             0
1      4              Down  0             0

Member 2

Member Stacking Port  State Peer Member   Peer Port
------ -------------- ----- ------------- -------
2      1              Up    1             2
2      2              Up    0             0
2      3              Down  0             0
2      4              Down  0             0

The show stacking command does not show that the member is “Not Joined.”

A log file indicates that a “topo /hello” was seen from a switch that was not part of the current stack ID. The console of the switch that should have been member 3 shows the following example output.

Viewing output from the “not joined” switch

switch(config)# show stacking

Stack ID         : 00011cc1-de4dbd40
MAC Address      : 1cc1de-4dbd64
Stack Topology   : Unknown
Stack Status     : Active
Uptime           : 0d 0h 1m
Software Version : KA.15.05.0000x

Mbr
ID  Mac Address   Model                             Pri Status
--- ------------- --------------------------------- --- -------------------
1   1cc1de-4dbd40 HP J9575A 3810-24G-2SFP+ Switch   128 Commander

The output is different if you have an inactive fragment, since this switch can have the configuration from an old stack. In this case, it might be inactive and show ‘missing’ switches from the old configuration. The stack-id value does not match the stack ID of the HP Stack 3810 stacking factory reset.

switch(config)# stacking factory-reset
Configuration will be deleted and device rebooted,continue [y/n]? 
Y
              

To join this switch to the other stack, execute the stacking factory-reset command to erase all of the stale stacking configuration information. This command automatically reboots the switch and on its subsequent boot, the switch is able to join the new stack.