ā05-21-2024 07:56 AM
Hi All
I am looking at some switch upgrades, I need 10G base T copper and 25G uplinks.
We normally use the C9200-24UXB switches, these have bigger buffers (64MB)
I need a few more ports and the best forwarding rate possible, so I am looking at the 9300X-48TX, this has 32MB buffers but has a lot higher switching capacity and forwarding rate.
I assume I won't need these bigger buffers as the backplane of the 9300X switch has a higher capacity and forwarding rate, thus will have no need to "buffer" the traffic ? is this correct ?
Cheers
ā05-21-2024 04:50 PM
@carl_townshend wrote:
these have bigger buffers (64MB)
Standard Catalyst-range per-port buffer had always been 64 Mb.
Something beefier (deeper buffers) would fall into the Nexus range.
ā05-22-2024 12:20 AM
Hi Leo
Sorry to correct you, the normal 9300s have 16 or 32Mbit buffers by default, see below
ā05-22-2024 12:37 AM
Mea culpa.
ā05-21-2024 06:22 PM
Hi Carl,
I agree with Leo! If this is for server/data center environment with VMs and storage, and you need more buffer, take a look at the Nexus series.
HTH
ā05-21-2024 07:58 PM
"I assume I won't need these bigger buffers as the backplane of the 9300X switch has a higher capacity and forwarding rate, thus will have no need to "buffer" the traffic ? is this correct ?"
Not necessarily.
Many modern Enterprise or DC switch fabrics will handle all ports, concurrently, at wire-speed. Additionally fabric ingress buffering often leads to head-of-line blocking. So, port buffering is often for egress.
Actually egress port buffering is only needed to handle concurrent multiple egress requests, bursty too fast requests and/or TCP BDP.
Not knowing anything about your network, cannot comment on what your optimal buffer needs are.
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