As far as I know IEEE 802.3ad (LACP) Trunks must be co-terminus (they must terminate their originating members' links against the same physical Switch)...so Distributed Trunking was introduced to overcome that protocol limitation:
"The IEEE standard 802.3ad requires that all links in a trunk group originate from the same switch. Distributed trunking uses a proprietary protocol that allows two or more port trunk links distributed across two switches to create a trunk group. The grouped links appear to the downstream device as if they are from a single device. This allows third party devices such as switches, servers, or any other networking device that supports trunking to interoperate with the distributed trunking switches (DTSs) seamlessly. Distributed trunking provides device-level redundancy in addition to link failure protection."
So I asked about DT and VSF, especially from the point of view of edge Switches or Servers (redundantly) connected to the VSF.