DM4000 Datasheet
DM4000 Datasheet
DM4000 Datasheet
July 2015
2 | 32
Main Features
Wire Speed L2, L3 & MPLS
The DM4000 Switches line includes switch fabric of up to 512Gbit/s, complete L2, L3 (IPv4/v6) and
MPLS package switching is always performed in hardware (wire speed), so as to ensure low latency in
switching. The filter/meter/ACLs functions are performed by the ASIC, without impact on the
performance of the CPU unit or the forwarding of packages.
The layer 2, 3 and MPLS protocol are implemented in software in order to assemble the MAC address,
IP routes and MPLS label tables (push/pop/swap). The DM4000 has a high RAM memory capacity,
enabling a large storage of software tables (RIB, MRIB, LRIB, L2RIB, etc.). Besides that, it also
provides a high processing capacity (CPU), enabling it to support an elevated protocol scalability,
route processing and rapid convergence of traffic in hardware.
IP/MPLS Networks
DM4000 Switches line supports IP (IPv4 and IPv6) both static and dynamic routing RIPv2, OSPFv2,
OSPFv3(3) and BGP4. It is possible to assemble a great variety of IPv4/IPv6 applications, with routing
executed in hardware, not affecting the equipments performance, even when using 1Gbit/s, 10Gbit/s
or LAG (Link Aggregation).
TLS Transparent LAN Services may be implemented through L2 VPN over MPLS.
DM4000 may be used in MPLS network as LER (Label Edge Router) or LSR (Label Switch Router).
For the MPLS infrastructure, it is possible the establishment of LSPs or unidirectional paths in the
MPLS network, through LDP or RSVP-TE protocols, as well as LDP over RSVP-TE tunneling feature
support. The RSVP-TE protocol provides support to FRR feature (Fast ReRoute), which allow the
establishment of backup RSVP tunnels (detour). In an eventual network failure, the main tunnel is
commuted to the detour tunnel, performing times of convergency near 50ms.
LSPs may be assembled over interfaces 1Gbit/s (electrical or optical), 10Gbit/s (XFP) and interfaces
802.3ad (LAG).
Using LDP infrasctructure, it is possible to use the MPLS VPN services in configuration such as: pointto-point (VPWS), point-multipoint (VPLS) and in hierarquical mode (H-VPLS), named L2VPNoLDP.
Using RSVP infrasctructure, it is possible to implement the service L2VPN-TE, which use a RSVP
tunnel as destination (L2VPNoRSVP). If the infrastructure contains the LSP and RSVP protocols, this
service is named L2VPNoLDPoRSVP.
For L2VPN applications is possible to carry Ethernet frames in VC-Type Ethernet or VLAN modes.
In an IP/MPLS application scenario, is also possible to implement multicast IPTV services, using
protocols as OSPF and PIM for IPv4/IPv6 in layer 3, ensuring an infrastructure enabled to assemble a
multiservice network.
Chassis
DM4000 chassis solution supports up to eight interface modules and two hot-swappable redundant
MPU modules. The DM4004 and DM4008 uses passive backplane and redundant power source
supplies. The connection between MPU and interface modules is assembled over a topology which is
protected against failures, ensuring full redundancy for data paths. The system is distributed and
modular, both in the hardware (dataplane) and software (controlplane) levels.
Each interface module is equipped with CPU, memory and its own cross-switch in order to work either
in the standalone system (DM4001 version) or in a chassis with distributed system (DM4004 with 4
slots for interface cards or DM4008 with 8 slots for interface cards) with MPUs.
3 | 32
Software
The DATACOM switches software architecture is based on a modular architecture platform, both in
the application and operating levels. This way it is possible to reset software processes individually,
define different priorities for critical processes, among other possibilities.
Control plane is performed separately from routing plane. This way, data traffic is not affected by
control traffic. Control level protocols define the configuration actions that will be transferred to the
hardware of the device which runs the functions in wire speed mode.
Software processing is split into
modules. Packets are routed in a
traffic does not require switching
to the MPU and from there to the
Management Facilities
A complete centralized FCAPS management is available through the DATACOMs management
software, the DmView, with sending traps with alarms and events in the system, on either Windows,
Linux or Solaris platforms, and with full redundancy. The device has a CLI Command Line Interface
with automatic assistance in the syntax of commands and parameters, and is accessible through
SSHv2, Telnet, and RS-232 Console. The protocols SNMPv1, v2c and v3 over IPv4 and IPv6 using
authentication and/or cryptography, and 4 RMON groups are also available.
Besides in-band management, DM4000 Switches family has an Ethernet interface for out-of-band
management.
The in-band management of the DM4000 switches can be made via loopback IP address (virtual) or
its VLAN interface IP address. The accesses to the equipments configuration are protected by
passwords in accordance to the level attributed for each user. Is also possible the usage of external
services RADIUS or TACACS+ to limit the commands executed by the user.
Access and management both inband or out-of-band are possible via WEB (HTTP and/or HTTPs), CLI
or through console interface (RJ45 connector).
Tools are available for network and cabling infrastructure and connectivity diagnostics, including
Digital Diagnostic (SFF-8472). Cables may be tested for interruptions or cable failures, through
specific commands for diagnoses.
Another important tool, available in DM4000 Series is the monitoring of processess and consumption
of the CPU and memory of the switches, allowing an accompaniment and analisys of the devices
performance.
DM4000 provides, in hardware, the ports or packet flow monitoring functionality. It does not affect
the performance of DM4000, and it can forward the data traffic to a specific port.
DATACOM DM4000 Series stores up to 10 different configurations and two firmware versions in the
memory. Through the flash configuration is possible to choose which configuration and firmware
version will be loaded in the equipment initialization.
Supports resolution of IPv4 and IPv6 (DNS IPv4/v6) for equipment names (hostnames), easing
management actions via Telnet and SSH, for example.
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configuration can be made by using IEEE 802.1p standard, IP Precedence or DSCP fields, TCP/UDP
ports, among others. The QoS policies can be attributed to physical interface (1Gbit/s or 10Gbit/s) or
to the logical interface (i.e. Port Channel).
Filter/meter/ACL functions are executed by the ASIC, not affecting the CPU performance or data
forwarding.
The Bandwidth control has a granularity of 64kbit/s on the definition of CIR (Committed Information
Rate) and PIR (Peak Information Rate), and may be applied to either the input or output port traffic,
or to a specific packet flow through the use of HW filters, or yet hierarchically (HQoS) (3).
The filters are quite flexible features, allowing multiple matches and actions on the packets. Some of
filter options supported are listed below:
Security
Switch Family has mechanisms that guarantee secure operation and maintenance of the installed
devices. Communication protocols use cryptography and it is possible to specify, through HW filters,
which units of the network may have management access to other devices.
A highly secure and trustworthy management structure may be built through local and remote Syslog,
user authentication, authorization and accounting (AAA) through RADIUS and TACACS+, email alarm
notification, single clock via SNTP, protection against Denial of Service (DoS/DDoS) attacks and port
authentication via 802.1x.
For Metro Ethernet applications, the number of MAC addresses available may be limited per port and
per VLAN; L2 and L3 protection mechanisms may be used against DoS/DDoS attacks, and bandwidth
may be limited for broadcast, multicast and destination lookup failure (DLF) traffic. It is also possible
to send TRAPs via SNMP protocol for scheduled events or violation attempts.
VLANs
The assemble of Virtual LANs in DM4000 Switches may use 4,096 VLANs defined in IEEE 802.1q
standard simultaneously, offering double tagging (Q-in-Q) functionality and enabling the creation of
TLS services (Some VLANs can be allocated for internal use, remaining 4,094 VLANs for effective
use). VLANs may be defined by protocol, by MAC address and by IP-subnet. Ports may be overlapped
on port-based VLANs.
5 | 32
management interface. The many match options enables a great variety of monitoring methods of
data flow, VLAN/VPN traffic, etc.
Additionally, the model cards E/H Series have an output filter. See table of filters capacity values of
DM4000 hardware for each type of interface modules.
Protection Mechanisms
In layer 2, Spanning Tree protocols are available, including Rapid Spanning Tree (RSTP), which has
shorter conversion times, Multiple Spanning Tree (MSTP) for better resource allocation and greater
scalability, the Per Vlan Spanning Tree (PVST) and the Per Vlan Spanning Tree Plus (PVST+) as well
as Ethernet Automatic Protection Switching (EAPS), Ethernet Ring Protection Switching (ERPS) and
ITU-T G.8032 (including Amendment A) protocols, which are specific for sub-50ms Ethernet rings.
Through link aggregation functionality (LAG), it is possible to group physical ports into logic ports,
with automatic load balancing and recovering with typical sub-200ms times. In DM4004 and DM4008
chassis is available the feature to aggregate physical ports from interface cards which are placed in
different slots. It enables the design of Metro Ethernet application topologies with protection and
short failure recovery times.
Troubleshooting
DM4000 family provides many resources designed to debug protocols or anomalies in network or
devices performance.
Among the various debug mechanisms available are:
RMON
Debug Log
Mirroring or Monitor (is possible to mirror the traffic of many ports, with various VLANs to a
specific port n:1, and it is also possible build mirroring system based on VLAN)
TACACS
RADIUS
SNMP
Multicast L2 e L3
Designed for multicast applications, DM4000 handles multicast L2 & L3 packets on hardware. DM4000
supports protocols IGMP v1/v2/v3, MLD v1/v2, PIM-SM with hardware support for encapsulation of
PIM-Register messages, according to RFC4601, and PIM-SSM function, according to RFC4607. DR
election and Rendezvous Point (RP) configuration in static mode or via BootStrap are supported as
well.
OAM Ethernet
DM4000 Switches support End-to-End OAM (CFM) according to IEEE 802.1ag and ITU-T Y.1731
standards. This enables proactively monitoring of the connectivity (Continuity Check) and isolating
faults through Loopback Messages (ping L2) and Link trace Messages (traceroute L2).
Point-to-Point OAM (EFM) according to IEEE 802.3ah is also supported. It enables fault indications,
including Dying Gasp, Unidirectional Link and Critical Event.
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EFM operates with a configurable interval between PDUs, for interoperability with other vendors.
Another management possibility can be made through E-LMI (MEF 16), in order to perform the
automatic configuration of the device.
Pseudowire TDM
Designed to meet the convergence applications of services developed for the new packet network,
DM4000 enables the use of pseudowire (PWE3) technology for the emulation of attributes essential to
the TDM service(4).
Circuit emulation is performed on a E1 channel, and E1 electrical ports and STM-1 optical ports are
available as interface. It also supports E1 grooming (Nx64 kbit/s).
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ETH48GT H Series(8)
Interface card 48-port Gigabit Ethernet for DM4000 Switches. It is compatible with the 1, 4 and 8-slot
chassis version, and switch fabric of MPU384/MPU512. It has a standalone bandwidth of 96Gbit/s,
with 48 electrical ports 10/100/1000Base-T ports with RJ45 connectors. As an option, it is capable of
supporting MPLS LER/LSR/VPN.
ETH24GX+2x10GX H Series(8)
Interface card 24-port Gigabit plus two port 10 Gigabit Ethernet for DM4000 Switches. It is
compatible with the 1, 4 and 8-slot chassis version, and switch fabric of MPU384/MPU512. It has a
standalone bandwidth of 88Gbit/s, with 24 Gigabit SFP ports (100/1000Base-X or SGMII) and two 10
Gigabit XFP ports. As an option, it is capable of supporting MPLS LER/LSR/VPN. SFP and XFP Modules
are sold separately.
ETH24GX+2x10GX E Series(8)
Interface card 24-port Gigabit plus two port 10 Gigabit Ethernet for DM4000 Switches. It is
compatible with the 1, 4 and 8-slot chassis version, and switch fabric of MPU384/MPU512. With
reduced L2 and L3 forwarding tables, it has a standalone bandwidth of 88Gbit/s, with 24 Gigabit SFP
ports (100/1000Base-X or SGMII) and two 10 Gigabit XFP ports. As an option, it is capable of
supporting MPLS LER/LSR/VPN. SFP and XFP Modules are sold separately.
ETH24GX H Series(8)
Interface card 24-port Gigabit Ethernet for DM4000 Switches. It is compatible with the 1, 4 and 8-slot
chassis version, and switch fabric of MPU384/MPU512. It has a standalone bandwidth of 48Gbit/s,
with 24 Gigabit SFP ports (100/1000Base-X or SGMII). As an option, it is capable of supporting MPLS
LER/LSR/VPN. SFP Modules are sold separately.
ETH24GT H Series(8)
Interface card 24-port Gigabit Ethernet for DM4000 Switches. It is compatible with the 1, 4 and 8-slot
chassis version, and switch fabric of MPU384/MPU512. It has a standalone bandwidth of 48Gbit/s,
with 24 10/100/1000Base-T ports in RJ45 connectors. As an option, it is capable of supporting MPLS
LER/LSR/VPN.
ETH24GX E Series(8)
Interface card 24-port Gigabit Ethernet for DM4000 Switches. It is compatible with the 1, 4 and 8-slot
chassis version, and switch fabric of MPU384/MPU512. With reduced L2 and L3 forwarding tables, it
has a standalone bandwidth of 48Gbit/s, with 24 Gigabit SFP ports (100/1000Base-X or SGMII). As an
option, it is capable of supporting MPLS LER/LSR/VPN. SFP Modules are sold separately.
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ETH2x10GX H Series(8)
Interface card 2-port 10 Gigabit Ethernet for DM4000 Switches. It is compatible with the 4 and 8-slot
version of the chassis, and switch fabric of MPU384/MPU512. It has a standalone bandwidth of
40Gbit/s, with two 10G XFP ports. As an option, it is capable of supporting MPLS LER/LSR/VPN. XFP
Modules are sold separately.
ETH4x10GX H Series(8)
Interface card 4-port 10 Gigabit Ethernet for DM4000 Switches. It is compatible with the 1, 4 and 8slot chassis version, and switch fabric of MPU384/MPU512. It has a standalone bandwidth of
80Gbit/s, with four 10G XFP ports. As an option, it is capable of supporting MPLS LER/LSR/VPN. XFP
Modules are sold separately.
ETH4x10GX E Series(8)
Interface card with 4-port 10 Gigabit Ethernet for DM4000 Switches. It is compatible with the 1, 4
and 8-slot chassis version, and switch fabric of MPU384/MPU512. With reduced L2 and L3 forwarding
tables, it has a standalone bandwidth of 80Gbit/s, with four 10G XFP ports. As an option, it is capable
of supporting MPLS LER/LSR/VPN. XFP Modules are sold separately.
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equipped to offer PWE3 TDM. It supports IEEE 1588-2008 (v2). As an option, it is capable of
supporting MPLS LER/LSR/VPN. SFP and XFP Modules are sold separately.
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DM4000 MPUs
MPU384
Main Processing Unit comprised of main CPU and matrix switch of 384Gbit/s. It may be used
individually or in redundant configuration. For H and E Series model interface cards, the same HW
works at higher wire speed, reaching a switching capability of 416Gbit/s.
Handles up to eight interface cards at 52Gbit/s each one (up to 26 Gigabit wire speed interfaces per
interface card) or up to four interface cards at 104Gbit/s each one (up to 52 Gigabit wire speed
interfaces per interface card).
MPU512
Main Processing Unit comprised of main CPU and matrix switch of 512Gbit/s. It may be used
individually or in redundant configuration.
Handles up to eight interface cards at 64Gbit/s each one (up to 32 Gigabit interfaces per interface
card) or up to four interface cards at 128Gbit/s each one (up to 64 Gigabit interfaces per interface
card).
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Chassis
DM4001 Chassis
Chassis with backplane card for 19-inch racks with 1U high, capable of handling one interface card.
The chassis has dual power input.
Characteristics:
Redundant power input for -48VDC with redundant power supply in the interface card;
DM4004 Chassis
A 19-inch racks cabinet chassis with backplane card, capable of handling up to 4 interface cards,
totaling 192x 1Gbit/s ports or 16x 10Gbit/s ports. The backplane execute the data traffic
interconnections and interface cards management, enabling the device operate as single equipment
controlled by MPU. In order to ensure maximum operation availability, the DM4004 chassis supports
the operation with redundant MPUs, hot-swappable fan and redundant power input. DM4004 chassis
is available in two models: DC (6U high and power input of -38,4V and -72V) and AC (7,5U high and
power input of 100V or 240V).
Characteristics:
All interface cards works as a single unit in the management point of view. It behaves as a
unique, but large-sized device, enabling the creation of logical ports and assembling of rings
and other protection topologies between ports of different interface cards, increasing its
availability;
Bandwidth optimization, using the interface card local processor to switch the traffic destined
to many ports of a same interface card, not burdening the MPU;
Redundant MPU operation (1+1), ensuring configuration maintenance and the quick service
recovering in case of failure. For this operating mode, both MPUs model must be the same;
Passive backplanes, with non-blocking switch between interface cards, until MPU switching
limit;
Redundant power input of -48VDC, with redundant power supplies in each interface card;
In AC model, it provides two redundant hot-swappable power supplies, which can be AC (100
~ 240V) or DC (-38,4 ~ -72V).
DM4008 Chassis
A 19-inch rack chassis with backplane card, capable of handling up to 8 interface cards, totaling 384x
1Gbit/s ports or 32x 10Gbit/s ports. The backplane execute the data traffic interconnections and
interface cards management, enabling the device operate as single equipment controlled by MPU. In
order to ensure maximum operation availability, the DM 4004 chassis supports the operation with
redundant MPUs, hot-swappable fan and redundant power input. DM4008 chassis is available in two
models: DC (6U high and power input of -38.4V and -72V) and AC (7.5U high and power input of
100V ou 240V).
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Characteristics:
All interface cards works as a single unit in the management point of view. It behaves as a
unique, but large-sized device, enabling the creation of logical ports and assembling of rings
and other protection topologies between ports of different interface cards, increasing its
availability
Bandwidth optimization, using the interface card local processor to switch the traffic destined
to many ports of a same interface card, not burdening the MPU
Redundant MPU operation (1+1), ensuring configuration maintenance and the quick service
recovering in case of failure. For this operating mode, both MPUs model must be the same
Passive backplanes
Redundant power input of -48VDC, with redundant power supplies in each interface card
In AC model, it provides two redundant hot-swappable power supplies, which can be AC (100
~ 240V) or DC (-38.4 ~ -72V)
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Hardware
ETH48GX
ETH24GX+2x10GX
ETH24GX
ETH24GX
H Series
H Series
H Series
E Series
Switch L2
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Router L3
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
QoS
L2-L4
L2-L4
L2-L4
L2-L4
MPLS
LER/LSR
LER/LSR
LER/LSR
LER/LSR(1)
100/1000Base-X Ports
(SFP)
48
24
24
24
NA
NA
NA
512k(2,6)
512k(2,6)
512k(2,6)
32k
L3 hosts (IPv4)
4k
4k
4k
4k
L3 hosts (IPv6)
4k
4k
4k
4k
L3 Routes (IPv4)
512k(2)
512k(2)
512k(2)
16k
L3 Routes (IPv6)
256k(2)
256k(2)
256k(2)
8k
L2 Multicast groups
1k
1k
1k
1k
L3 Multicast groups
(IPv4)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
L3 Multicast groups
(IPv6)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
Filter Rules
8k
8k
8k
8k
TDM PWE3
NA
NA
NA
NA
IEEE1588-2008
NA
NA
NA
NA
DM4000
14 | 32
ETH24GX+2x10GX
ETH2x10GX
ETH4x10GX
E Series
H Series
H Series
Switch L2
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Router L3
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
QoS
L2-L4
L2-L4
L2-L4
MPLS
LER/LSR(1)
LER/LSR
LER/LSR
100/1000Base-T Ports
NA
NA
NA
100/1000Base-X Ports
(SFP)
24
NA
NA
32k
512k(2,6)
512k(2,6)
L3 hosts (IPv4)
4k
4k
4k
L3 hosts (IPv6)
4k
4k
4k
L3 Routes (IPv4)
16k
512k(2)
512k(2)
L3 Routes (IPv6)
8k
256k(2)
256k(2)
L2 Multicast groups
1k
1k
1k
L3 Multicast groups
(IPv4)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
L3 Multicast groups
(IPv6)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
Filter Rules
8k
8k
8k
TDM PWE3
NA
NA
NA
IEEE1588-2008
NA
NA
NA
DM4000
15 | 32
ETH48GT
ETH4x10GX
ETH24GT
H Series
E Series
H Series
Switch L2
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Router L3
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
QoS
L2-L4
L2-L4
L2-L4
MPLS
LER/LSR
NA
LER/LSR
10/100/1000Base-T Ports
48
NA
24
100/1000Base-X Ports
(SFP)
NA
NA
NA
TDM Ports
NA
NA
512k(2)
32k
512k(2,6)
L3 hosts (IPv4)
4k
4k16k
4k16k
L3 hosts (IPv6)
4k
4k8k
4k8k
L3 Routes (IPv4)
512k(2)
16k
512k(2)
L3 Routes (IPv6)
256k(2)
8k
256k(2)
L2 Multicast groups
1k
1k
1k
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
Filter Rules
8k
8k
8k
TDM PWE3
NA
NA
NA
IEEE1588-2008
NA
NA
NA
DM4000
16 | 32
PWE3 ETH20GX+
PWE3 ETH20GX+
PWE3 ETH16GX+
PWE3 ETH16GX+
32E1 H Series
2x10GX+32E1 H Series
4STM1 H Series
2x10GX+4STM1 H Series
Switch L2
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Router L3
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
Wire Speed
QoS
L2-L4
L2-L4
L2-L4
L2-L4
MPLS
LER/LSR
LER/LSR
LER/LSR
LER/LSR
100/1000Base-X Ports
(SFP)
20
20
16
16
NA
NA
TDM Ports
32 E1 (G703)
32 E1 (G703)
4 STM1 (SFP)
4 STM1 (SFP)
512k(2,6)
512k(2,6)
512k(2,6)
512k(2,6)
L3 hosts (IPv4)
4k
4k
4k
4k
L3 hosts (IPv6)
4k
4k
4k
4k
L3 Routes (IPv4)
512k(2)
512k(2)
512k(2)
512k(2)
L3 Routes (IPv6)
256k(2)
256k(2)
256k(2)
256k(2)
L2 Multicast groups
1k
1k
1k
1k
L3 Multicast groups
(IPv4)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
L3 Multicast groups
(IPv6)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
4k(5)
Filter Rules
8k
8k
8k
8k
TDM PWE3
SAToP / CESoPSN
SAToP / CESoPSN
SAToP / CESoPSN
SAToP / CESoPSN
IEEE1588-2008
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
DM4000
17 | 32
DM4000 Software
Characteristics
Flow Control
Interface Basic
Parameters
Auto-negotiation
Details
Backpressure in half duplex; PAUSE (IEEE 802.3x) in full duplex
Description, MDI/MDIX, Speed Mode and Duplex Mode, Flow Control,
Port MTU Size, GARP, Link-Flap detection, Port-Channel, switchport
Speed, duplex mode, flow control and MDI/MDIX
HTTP/HTTPs Access with more than one simultaneous access
Remote Management of Network Devices through the protocol RDM
SNMP v1/v2c/v3 over IPv4 and IPv6
Command Line Interface (CLI) via SSHv2, Telnet and Console RJ45,
USB(1) or RS232
RMON groups 1 (statistics), 2 (historic), 3 (alarms) and 9 (events)
ACL configuration with multiple comparisons and actions
Network Diagnostic Tools (telnet, traceroute, ping)
Cabling Diagnostic Tool
Up to 2 firmwares in flash, with upgrade via SCP, TFTP or HTTP/HTTPS
Management
18 | 32
Characteristics
Management
Details
DHCP for IPv6
IEEE 802.1x with guest vlan, restricted vlan and vlan assignment
Filters in HW to access control SNMP, Web, Telnet and SSH
MAC Address Limit configurable per port and per VLAN
Allow only Authorized DHCP Servers
Syslog Local and Remote with support to Multiples Syslog Servers
Security
VLAN
Protection
Backup-Link
Monitoring of network link status through Link State Tracking
Loopback Detection
BPDU Guard
19 | 32
Characteristics
Details
Protection Against DOS in IP and ARP Spoofing
Link flap
Protection
QoS:
Marking
Classifying
Priorization
Filter rules
Rate Shaping (Ingress e Egress) in hardware, with granularity of 64 kbit/s per
port and per traffic flow in CIR and PIR definition
Weighted Round Robin, Weighted Fair Queuing, Strict Priority or a
combination of these techniques as queue scheduling algorithm
Hierarquical QoS (HQoS) (3)
Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) support
Dynamic or static configuration via LACP (IEEE 802.3ad)
Up to 128 logical groups, with 8 active ports in each group
Link Aggregation
Equivalent use to non-aggregated links for L2, L3, MPLS and QoS functions
Configurable Load Balance Criteria (i.e MAC, IP, ...).
Maximum Broadcast, Multicast and DLF rate, controlled by port
IGMP (v1/v2/v3) fore Snooping, Query and SSM Mapping functions
Aging L2 global
Tunneling of protocols L2 (TLS)
L2 Functionalities
20 | 32
Characteristics
Details
RSPAN Remote Switched Port Analyzer
L2 Functionalities
L3 Functionalities
MPLS
PWE3
21 | 32
(1)
IEEE
802.1ab
802.1ad
Provider Bridges
802.1ag
802.1d
Bridging
802.1F
802.1p
Priority Support
802.1q
Virtual LAN
802.1q-in-q
VLAN Stacking
802.1s
802.1t
802.1D Maintenance
802.1u
802.1Q Maintenance
802.1v
802.1x
Port Security
802.1y
802.1D Maintenance
802.1w
802.3
10Base-T
802.3ab
1000Base-T
802.3ac
802.3ad
802.3ah
802.3ae
10GBase-SR/LR/ER/SW/LW/EW
802.3i
802.3u
100Base-TX
22 | 32
802.3x
Flow Control
802.3z
1000Base-SX/LX
1588-2008
ITU-T
Y.1453
Y.1731
ISO
ISO 10589
MEF
9
14
24
IETF
RFC854
RFC1305
RFC1492
RFC1812
RFC1886
RFC2030
RFC2104
RFC2138
RFC2139
RFC2375
RFC2460
IPv6 Specification(3)
23 | 32
RFC2461
RFC2462
RFC2464
RFC2544
RFC2865
RFC2866
RADIUS Accounting
RFC2711
RFC3021
RFC3164
RFC3176
RFC3272
RFC3513
RFC3579
RFC3587
RFC3596
RFC3619
RFC3917
RFC4213
RFC4250
RFC4251
RFC4252
RFC4253
RFC4254
RFC4291
RFC4443
ICMPv6(3)
RFC4861
RFC4862
RFC5101
RFC5095
24 | 32
Routing
RFC1723
RFC1965
RFC1997
RFC2082
RFC2154
RFC2328
OSPF Version 2
RFC2329
RFC2338
RFC2370
RFC2385
RFC2439
RFC2453
RIP Version 2
RFC2545
RFC2740
RFC2796
RFC2842
RFC2858
RFC2918
RFC3021
RFC3065
RFC3101
RFC3107
RFC3137
RFC3315
RFC3392
RFC3623
RFC3630
RFC3768
25 | 32
RFC4271
RFC4360
RFC4724
RFC4760
RFC4893
RFC5065
RFC5187
RFC5250
RFC5340
RFC5396
RFC5492
Multicast
RFC1112
RFC2236
RFC2710
RFC3376
RFC3569
RFC3810
RFC4541
RFC4601
RFC4604
RFC4607
RFC4608
MPLS
RFC2205
RFC2209
RFC2210
26 | 32
RFC2702
RFC2961
RFC3031
MPLS architecture
RFC3032
RFC3036
LDP specification
RFC3037
LDP applicability
RFC3209
RFC3210
RFC3215
RFC3270
RFC3346
RFC3443
RFC3469
RFC3478
RFC3916
RFC3936
RFC3985
RFC4090
RFC4221
RFC4377
RFC4378
RFC4379
RFC4446
RFC4447
RFC4448
RFC4664
RFC4665
RFC4762
RFC4905
27 | 32
RFC4906
RFC5036
LDP Specification
RFC5443
QoS
RFC2309
RFC2474
RFC2475
RFC2597
RFC2598
RFC2697
RFC2698
RFC3140
RFC3246
RFC3644
RFC3670
RFC1212
RFC1213
RFC1215
RFC1229
RFC1441
RFC1493
RFC1573
RFC1643
RFC1724
RFC1757
28 | 32
RFC1850
RFC1901
RFC1902
RFC1903
RFC1904
RFC1905
RFC1906
RFC1907
RFC1908
RFC2021
RFC2037
RFC2096
RFC2233
RFC2358
RFC2570
RFC2571
RFC2572
RFC2573
SNMP Applications
RFC2574
RFC2575
RFC2576
RFC2578
RFC2579
RFC2580
RFC2665
RFC2674
RFC2787
RFC2819
RFC2863
29 | 32
RFC3411
RFC3412
RFC3413
SNMP Application
RFC3414
RFC3415
RFC3416
RFC3417
RFC3418
RFC3635
RFC4188
RFC4273
RFC4293
RFC4363
PWE3
RFC4197
RFC4553
RFC5086
DRAFT IETF
pwe3-redundancy-bit-04
Accessories
DM4000
DM4000
DM4000
DM4000
DM4000
DM4000
DM4000
DM4000
DM4000
DM4000
DM4000
DM4000
30 | 32
31 | 32
(1)
Check with Technical Support, HW and/or SW versions to support this functionality. This functionality may not be available on all
configurations.
(2)
Maximum values due to flexible and configurable resource sharing of external memory with 512k entries. In the following list is possible to
check some examples:
512k MAC Address table, 32k IPv4 (L3 Routes) and 16k IPv6 (L3 Routes)
32k MAC Address table, 512k IPv4 (L3 Routes) and 256k IPv6 (L3 Routes)
32k MAC Address table, 32k IPv4 (L3 Routes) and 256k IPv6 (L3 Routes)
32k MAC Address table, 256k IPv4 (L3 Routes) and 128k IPv6 (L3 Routes)
(3)
Available in the E/H Series model of interface cards. For all other models, contact technical support.
(4)
(5)
32 | 32