Is there any difference between active/standby and master/member? I have the same configuration on a Cisco 2960, and it's labeled as master/member, while on a Cisco 9200S with the same configuration, it's labeled as active/standby.
Master and Active both are same If we have more than 2 switches in stack then 1 switch will be master/active 2nd switch will be elected as standby while 3rd and 4th switch will be named as members Max of 8 switches we can add to stack so switch 3 till 8 will be named as member
Not really it both switches automatically decides the renumber. But it is good practice and recommended to set the renumber manually because if your stack reboots then renumber can change if it is not manually set.
Is there any difference between active/standby and master/member? I have the same configuration on a Cisco 2960, and it's labeled as master/member, while on a Cisco 9200S with the same configuration, it's labeled as active/standby.
Master and Active both are same
If we have more than 2 switches in stack then 1 switch will be master/active 2nd switch will be elected as standby while 3rd and 4th switch will be named as members
Max of 8 switches we can add to stack so switch 3 till 8 will be named as member
Is this L2? Or L3?
I need to use inter-vlan and static routing.
In my thought, there is no problem on C9200L-24T-4G-E but I am not sure.
C9200l is l2 by default and it do not support inter vlan routing
did you really need to do a 'switch renumber' command ?
Not really it both switches automatically decides the renumber. But it is good practice and recommended to set the renumber manually because if your stack reboots then renumber can change if it is not manually set.