10-27-2023 05:43 AM
Hi,
Historically, there used to be an allocation of ports on a switch assigned to an ASIC within the switch. Various commands, eg. show int gig1/0/1 cap, for example, might indicate which group of ports were assigned / using the same ASIC.
I was reading the current 9300 series architecture white paper, and I see mention of UADP asic, and 6 rings internally etc, but I'm not sure if there is still an allocation of ports per a dedicated asic, or not (maybe just one common asic these days?).
Could anyone advise on current (eg. 9300) switches in regards to this topic? I am trying to analyse port & BW requirements from an Infra team, to decide if there is any switch limitations that I should be wary of (ie. cable up high BW devices to different ASICs for example).
Any help would be great. Thanks
10-27-2023 06:13 AM
Hi,
Your understanding is correct. Depending on the switch model, they use 1x UADP chipset (ASIC 0) or 2x UADP (ASIC 0 and 1). See Figures 1-11
HTH
10-27-2023 06:24 AM
From what I recall (?) reading 9k architecture papers, every port has equal access to resources so that there's no advantage to try to distribute port loading.
However, unknown what happens if a particular ASIC fails. I.e. a group of ports fail with it, or whether there's potential service degradation to all other ports.
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