1 /DISABLE
Disables the devices in a LAN Failover set. When disabled, LAN devices can be added to or deleted from the Failover set.
2 /ENABLE
Enables a Failover set, which activates the Logical LAN device. The LAN Failover driver selects a LAN device from the LAN Failover set as the active device and then allows I/O to the Logical LAN device.
3 /FAILOVER_SET
/FAILOVER_SET=(device-name[,...]) /[NO]FAILOVER_SET=(device-name[,...]) Specifies the members of a LAN Failover set.
4 /PRIORITY
/PRIORITY=value Sets the failover priority of a LAN device. Priority is given to the LAN failover device with the highest priority when choosing the active LAN device. When a LAN device with a higher priority becomes available, a failover transition to the newly available device is performed. This allows a system manager to set a preferred device by setting one LAN device to a higher priority than others. The LAN failover driver uses the preferred device when it is available.
5 /SIZE
/SIZE=value Sets the packet size of the LAN failover device. Valid values are STANDARD (the default) or JUMBO: o STANDARD is the Ethernet maximum packet size of 1518 bytes. o JUMBO is the oversize packet size available with Gigabit Ethernet devices. JUMBO is allowed only if all the LAN devices in the LAN failover set are Gigabit devices. Note that the size specified for the LAN failover device overrides the size set on the members of the LAN failover set; that is, the JUMBO frame setting of a LAN device is of no consequence when the size is determined for the LAN failover device.
6 /SWITCH
/SWITCH (SET DEVICE only) Forces a LAN failover to another member of the LAN failover set. You can test LAN failover operation by using this command to switch from one device to another.