01-15-2012 12:33 AM - edited 03-07-2019 04:21 AM
Hello evereone,
I want to understand - if 10G ports of 4948E (4 x 10Gb) they are block or non-blocks ?
I want to connect this switches with 20 GB (lag) to my BB switches and i need to prepare my infrastructure to 17.5GB troughput of video traffic
my conf. is: wan---> 4900M (20 gb)---> 4948E (20 gb) ---> asa 5585 ssp 20 (20 gb) --->lan
Thanks,
Mark
01-15-2012 04:12 AM
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The datasheet for that device notes:
• Nonblocking server-to-server traffic with 176-Gbps aggregate throughput
Since the device has 48 gig ports and 4 10gig port, i.e. 88 gig * 2 = 176 Gbps, the answer to your question about blocking or non-blocking for the 10 gig ports should be they are non-blocking.
BTW, most modern high performance switches are non-blocking, but that doesn't mean a port can't congest or that the switch fabric or the forwarding performance guarantee Ethernet wire-rate performance. From its stats, the 4948E's fabric and pps do guarantee wire-rate for IPv4, but that may not be true for you 4900M, depends what modules are installed.
01-15-2012 04:50 AM
Thank you Joseph,
the 4900M that i use is 4900M with 8 extension 10g module so i have a 16 x 10gb ports at all
In 4900M datasheet notes that he has 320g throughput so 16X10g=160Gb that mean i have non-blocking traffic through this port.
is this correct ?
01-15-2012 05:28 AM
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markdd1978 wrote:
Thank you Joseph,
the 4900M that i use is 4900M with 8 extension 10g module so i have a 16 x 10gb ports at all
In 4900M datasheet notes that he has 320g throughput so 16X10g=160Gb that mean i have non-blocking traffic through this port.
is this correct ?
Yes.
05-23-2012 09:06 AM
I need to use four 10G ports on a 4948E. I believe it supports 4 ports because I know of some 4948E configurations that show four 10G ports: T1/48, T1/49, T1/50, T1/51.
As you know, there are only two SFP slots in a 4948E. I was under the impression that X2-10GB-SR supports two 10G ports, but looking at the specs (link below), now I'm not sure whether they are talking about two connectors or two ports.
If the X2-10G-SR only supports one 10G port, do you know of any SPFs that support two 10 ports?
Please advise. No guesses please, because this is for an order.
Regards,
Dario
05-23-2012 02:53 PM
do you know of any SPFs that support two 10 ports?
Sure. The Nexus 5K has an "octopus" cable. This cable is 40 Gbps and "breaks out" into four 10 Gbps.
Another is the new WS-X6904-40G-2T with the FourX adaptors.
05-23-2012 06:50 PM
Thanks, but can you use those SFP's in a 4948E ?
05-23-2012 07:12 PM
Thanks, but can you use those SFP's in a 4948E ?
Which one? The Nexus or the FourX?
I'm not sure about the N5K octopus cable as I haven't had the chance to play with that but the FourX cassett will be compatible. The FourX is a cassette with four SFP ports.
01-15-2012 01:13 PM
In 4900M datasheet notes that he has 320g throughput so 16X10g=160Gb that mean i have non-blocking traffic through this port.
Yes and no. I believe the value "320 Gb" is expressed in HALF duplex.
01-15-2012 04:43 PM
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The Author of this posting offers the information contained within this posting without consideration and with the reader's understanding that there's no implied or expressed suitability or fitness for any purpose. Information provided is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as rendering professional advice of any kind. Usage of this posting's information is solely at reader's own risk.
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In no event shall Author be liable for any damages whatsoever (including, without limitation, damages for loss of use, data or profit) arising out of the use or inability to use the posting's information even if Author has been advised of the possibility of such damage.
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leolaohoo wrote:
In 4900M datasheet notes that he has 320g throughput so 16X10g=160Gb that mean i have non-blocking traffic through this port.Yes and no. I believe the value "320 Gb" is expressed in HALF duplex.
From 4900M data sheet:
Performance and Scalability
• 320-Gbps switching fabric
• Layer 2 hardware forwarding at 250 mpps
• Layer 3 hardware-based IP Cisco Express Forwarding routing at 250 mpps
• Layer 4 TCP and User Datagram Protocol (UDP) hardware-based filtering at 250 mpps
Believe fabric bandwidths are normally specified for duplex and pps for non-duplex. If correct, 16x10gig duplex ports would need a fabric of 320 Gbps and (14.8809524 Mpps * 16) 238.1 Mpps for wire-speed Ethernet.
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