Switch Agile de la serie S12700
Los switch Agile de la serie S12700 de Huawei son switch core dise?ados para redes de área de campus de próxima generación. Con el uso de una arquitectura de conmutación totalmente programable, la serie S12700 permite una personalización rápida y flexible de funciones y soporta una evolución fluida hacia redes definidas por software (SDN). La serie S12700 utiliza un Procesador de Redes Ethernet (ENP) de Huawei y cuenta con un Controlador de Acceso (AC) inalámbrico nativo que permite construir una red de tecnologías convergentes alámbricas e inalámbricas. Las capacidades del Servidor de Acceso Remoto de Banda Ancha (BRAS) nativo permiten una gestión detallada de usuarios y servicios. El Algoritmo de Conservación de Paquetes para Internet (iPCA) de Huawei soporta el monitoreo salto por salto de cualquier flujo de servicio. Esto permite gestionar servicios de manera más específica. La serie S12700 tiene la Plataforma de Enrutamiento Versátil (VRP) de Huawei, que ofrece servicios de conmutación de capa 2 y de capa 3 de alto rendimiento, al igual que servicios integrales de red, como VPN MPLS, hardware IPv6, escritorio en nube y videoconferencia. Además, la serie S12700 cuenta con una variedad de tecnologías confiables, lo que incluye la actualización del software en servicio, el direccionamiento sin interrupciones, la formación de clúster de hardware de matrices de conmutación CSS2 que facilita el backup 1+N de MPU, la BFD/OAM Eth de hardware y la protección de redes en forma de anillo. Estas tecnologías permiten mejorar la productividad y maximizar los tiempos de operación de redes. Con esto, se reduce el costo total de propiedad (TCO).
Make your network more agile and service-oriented
- The high-speed ENP chip used in the S12700 series is tailored for Ethernet. The chip's flexible packet processing and traffic control capabilities can meet current and future service requirements, helping build a highly scalable network.
- In addition to providing all the capabilities of common switches, the S12700 series provides fully programmable open interfaces and supports programmable forwarding behaviors. Enterprises can use the open interfaces to develop new protocols and functions independently or jointly with other vendors to build campus networks that meet their needs.
- The ENP chip uses a fully programmable architecture, on which enterprises can define their own forwarding models, forwarding behaviors, and lookup algorithms. This architecture speeds up service innovation and makes it possible to provision a customized service within six months, without replacing hardware. In contrast, traditional ASIC chips use a fixed forwarding architecture and follow a fixed forwarding process. For this reason, new services cannot be provisioned until new hardware is developed to support the services, which can take 1 to 3 years.
Deliver abundant services more agilely
- The native ACs of the S12700 series allow enterprises to build a wireless network without additional AC hardware. Each S12700 switch can manage 4K APs and 64K users. It is the first core switch that provides T-bit AC capabilities, which avoid the performance bottleneck on independent AC devices. The native T-bit AC capabilities help you better cope with challenges in the high-speed wireless era.
- The native BRAS on the S12700 series authenticates both wired and wireless users, delivering the same user experience no matter they connect to the network through wired or wireless access devices. The native BRAS supports various authentication methods, including 802.1X, MAC, and Portal authentication, and is capable of managing users based on user groups, domains, and time ranges. These functions visualize management of users and services and enable the transformation from device-centered management to user-centered management.
Provide fine granular management more agilely
- iPCA, Packet Conservation Algorithm for Internet, changes the traditional method of using simulated traffic for fault location. iPCA technology can monitor network quality for any service flow at any network node, at any time, and without extra costs. It can detect temporary service interruptions within 1 second and can identify faulty ports accurately. This cutting-edge fault detection technology turns "extensive management" into "fine granular management."
- The Super Virtual Fabric (SVF) technology can not only virtualize fixed-configuration switches into line cards of an S12700 switch but also virtualize APs as ports of the switch. With this virtualization technology, a physical network with core/aggregation switches, access switches, and APs can be virtualized into a "super switch," offering the simplest network management solution.
Industry-leading line cards
- Using Huawei advanced ENP chips, the S12700 series supports several million hardware entries, leaving traditional switches far behind. The S12700 series provides 1M MAC address entries and 3M FIB entries, meeting requirements of route-intensive scenarios, such as the metropolitan area network (MAN) for a television broadcasting network or education network. The capability to provide 1M NetStream entries enables the S12700 series to provide fine granular traffic statistics on collage campus networks and large-scale enterprise campus networks.
- The S12700 series provides a 1.5 GB buffer on each line card to prevent packet loss upon traffic bursts, delivering high-quality video services. Traditional switches only provide 4 MB buffer per card, which cannot ensure high-quality video stream transmission.
- The S12700 series supports high-density line-speed cards, such as 48*10GE and 8*100GE line cards. Each S12700 chassis can provide a maximum of 576 10GE ports and 96 100GE ports. This large port capacity fully meets the requirements of bandwidth-consuming applications, such as multimedia video conferencing, well protecting customer investments.
End-to-end reliability design
Device-level reliability: CSS2 switch fabric hardware clustering technology
- Based on back-to-back clustering technology that has been widely used on high-end core routers, the S12700 series employs the second generation switch fabric hardware clustering technology, CSS2, an enhancement to CSS switch fabric clustering technology.
- CSS2 technology connects cluster member switches through hardware channels of switch fabric units. Therefore, control packets and data packets of a cluster only need to be forwarded once by the switch fabric units and do not go through service cards. Compared with traditional service port clustering technologies, CSS2 minimizes the impact of software failures, reduces the risk of service interruption caused by service cards, and also significantly shortens the transmission latency.
- CSS2 supports 1+N backup of MPUs. This means a cluster can run stably as long as one MPU of any chassis in the cluster is working normally. In a cluster connected by service ports, each chassis must have at least one MPU working normally. Therefore, CSS2 is more reliable than traditional service port clustering technologies.
- CSS2 prevents a cluster from splitting. Control packets and data packets of a cluster are transmitted over independent channels. Even if all links between switch fabric units fail, the cluster will not split because these packets can still be transmitted over the control channels between MPUs. In a cluster connected by service ports, control packets and data packets are forwarded through links between service cards. Once a link between member devices fails, control packets and data packets will be lost, causing the cluster to split.
Network-level reliability: end-to-end hardware protection switching
- The S12700 uses a series of link detection and protection switching technologies, such as hardware Eth-OAM, BFD, G.8032, and Smart Ethernet Protection (SEP), to realize 50 ms end-to-end protection switching. These technologies help build a campus network that responds quickly to topology changes and provides the most reliable services.
Item | S12708 | S12712 |
---|---|---|
Switching capacity | 12.32/27.04 Tbit/s | 17.44/37.28 Tbit/s |
Packet forwarding rate | 6,240 /9,120 Mpps | 9,120/12,960 Mpps |
MPU slots | 2 | 2 |
SFU slots | 4 | 4 |
Service card slots | 8 | 12 |
Architecture | CLOS | |
Redundancy design | MPUs, SFUs, power supplies, and fan modules | |
CSS2 | 1+N backup of MPUs in a cluster | |
Up to 1.92 Tbit/s cluster bandwidth, 4 us inter-chassis transmission latency | ||
Wireless network management | Native AC | |
AP access control, AP region management, and AP profile management | ||
Radio profile management, uniform static configuration, and centralized dynamic management | ||
Basic WLAN services, QoS, security, and user management | ||
Deployment of ACs on different network layers | ||
User management | unified user management | |
802.1X, MAC, and Portal authentication | ||
Traffic- and time-based accounting | ||
User authorization based on user groups, domains, and time ranges | ||
VLAN | Access, trunk, and hybrid interface type, auto-negotiation of LNP links | |
Default VLAN | ||
VLAN switching | ||
QinQ and selective QinQ | ||
MAC address-based VLAN assignment | ||
ARP | 256K ARP entries | |
MAC address | 1M MAC address entries | |
Dynamic MAC address learning and aging | ||
Static, dynamic, and blackhole MAC address entries | ||
Source MAC address filtering | ||
MAC address limiting based on ports and VLANs | ||
Ring network protection | Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) (IEEE 802.1d), RSTP (IEEE 802.1w), and MSTP (IEEE 802.1s) | |
SEP | ||
Bridge Protocol Data Unit (BPDU), root protection, and loop protection | ||
BPDU tunnel | ||
G.8032 Ethernet Ring Protection Switching (ERPS) | ||
IP routing | 3M IPv4 routing entries | |
512K IPv6 routing entries | ||
IPv4 dynamic routing protocols, such as RIP, OSPF, IS-IS, and BGP | ||
IPv6 routing protocols, such as RIPng, OSPFv3, IS-ISv6, and BGP4+ | ||
Multicast | 128,000 multicast routing entries | |
IGMPv1/v2/v3 and IGMP v1/v2/v3 snooping | ||
PIM-DM, PIM-SM, and PIM-SSM | ||
Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) and Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP (MBGP) | ||
Fast leave | ||
Multicast traffic control | ||
Multicast querier | ||
Multicast protocol packet suppression | ||
Multicast Call Admission Control (CAC) | ||
Multicast ACL | ||
MPLS | Basic MPLS functions | |
MPLS Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM) | ||
MPLS Traffic Engineering (TE) | ||
MPLS VPN/VLL/VPLS | ||
Reliability | Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) and E-Trunk | |
Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) and Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) for VRRP | ||
BFD for BGP/IS-IS/OSPF/static route | ||
Non-Stop Forwarding (NSF) and Graceful Restart (GR) for BGP/IS-IS/OSPF/LDP | ||
TE Fast ReRoute (FRR) and IP FRR | ||
Eth-OAM 802.3ah and 802.1ag (hardware) | ||
ITU-Y.1731 | ||
Device Link Detection Protocol (DLDP) | ||
In-Service Software Upgrade (ISSU) | ||
QoS | 256K ACLs | |
Traffic classification based on Layer 2 headers, Layer 3 protocols, Layer 4 protocols, and 802.1p priority | ||
ACLs and actions such as Committed Access Rate (CAR), re-marking, and scheduling | ||
Queuing algorithms, such as SP, WRR, DRR, SP + WRR, and SP + DRR | ||
Congestion avoidance mechanisms, including (WRED) and tail drop | ||
5-level H-QoS | ||
Traffic shaping | ||
Configuration and maintenance | Terminal access services such as console port login, Telnet, and SSH | |
Network management protocols, such as SNMPv1/v2/v3 | ||
File uploading and downloading through FTP and TFTP | ||
BootROM upgrade and remote in-service upgrade | ||
Hot patches | ||
User operation logs | ||
Security and management | MAC address, Portal, 802.1x, and Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) snooping triggered authentication | |
RADIUS and HWTACACS authentication for login users | ||
Command line authority control based on user levels, preventing unauthorized users from using command configurations | ||
Defense against DoS attacks, Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) SYN Flood attacks, User Datagram Protocol (UDP) Flood attacks, broadcast storms, and heavy traffic attacks | ||
1K CPU hardware queues for hierarchical scheduling and protection of protocol packets on the control plane | ||
Remote Network Monitoring (RMON) | ||
Security protection * | Firewall | |
Network Address Translation (NAT) | ||
IPSec, SSL VPN | ||
Intrusion Protection System (IPS) | ||
Load balancing Analog Digital Conversion (ADC) | ||
Buffer capacity | 1.5 GB per card | |
Energy saving | Energy Efficient Ethernet (802.3az) | |
Dimensions (H x W x D in mm) | 663.95 x 442 x 489, 15U | 832.75 x 442 x 489, 19U |
Weight (empty chassis) | 19.8 kg | 38.45 kg |
Operating voltage | DC: –38.4V to –72V AC: 90V to 290V | |
Total power capacity | 6,600W | 6,600W |
*: The S12700 supports the NGFW, which is the next-generation firewall card, and the IPS card. For more specification information, see the brochures of the cards.
S12700 basic configuration | |
---|---|
LE2BN66ED000 | N66E DC assembly rack (eight 60A outputs, maximum 2,200W per output, 600 x 600 x 2,200 mm) |
LE2BN66EA000 | N66E AC assembly rack (four 16A outputs, maximum 2,500W per output, 600 x 600 x 2,200 mm) |
ET1BS12708S0 | S12708 assembly chassis |
ET1BS12712S0 | S12712 assembly chassis |
ET1MFBX00000 | Wide Voltage 129 Fan Box |
Monitoring unit | |
EH1D200CMU00 | Centralized monitoring unit |
Main processing unit | |
ET1D2MPUA000 | S12700 main control unit A, optional clock |
Switch fabric unit | |
ET1D2SFUA000 | S12700 switch fabric unit A |
ET1D2SFUC000 | S12700 switch fabric unit C |
ET1D2SFUD000 | S12700 switch fabric unit D |
100M/1000M Ethernet electrical interface cards | |
ET1D2G48TEA0 | 48-port 10/100/1000 BASE-T interface card (EA, RJ45) |
ET1D2G48TEC0 | 48-port 10/100/1000 BASE-T interface card (EC, RJ45) |
ET1D2G48TX1E | 48-port 10/100/1000 BASE-T interface card (X1E, RJ45)* |
100M/1000M Ethernet optical interface cards | |
ET1D2G24SEC0 | 24-port 100/1000 BASE-X interface card (EC, SFP) |
ET1D2G48SEA0 | 48-port 100/1000 BASE-X interface card (EA, SFP) |
ET1D2G48SEC0 | 48-port 100/1000 BASE-X interface card (EC, SFP) |
ET1D2G48SX1E | 48-port 100/1000 BASE-X interface card (X1E, SFP) |
100M/1000M Ethernet electrical and optical interface cards | |
ET1D2T36SEA0 | 36-port 10/100/1000 BASE-T and 12-port 100/1000 BASE-X interface card (EA, RJ45/SFP) |
10 GE optical interface cards | |
ET1D2X04XEA0 | 4-port 10G BASE-X interface card (EA, XFP) |
ET1D2X04XEC1 | 4-port 10G BASE-X interface card (EC, XFP) |
ET1D2S04SX1E | 4-port 10G BASE-X and 24-port 100/1000 BASE-X and 8-port 10/100/1000 BASE-T combo interface card (X1E, RJ45/SFP/SFP+) |
ET1D2S08SX1E | 8-port 10G BASE-X and 8-port 100/1000 BASE-X and 8-port 10/100/1000 BASE-T combo interface card (X1E, RJ45/SFP/SFP+) |
ET1D2X12SSA0 | 12-port 10G BASE-X interface card (SA, SFP+) |
ET1D2X16SSC0 | 16-port 10G BASE-X interface card (SC, SFP+) |
ET1D2X48SEC0 | 48-port 10G BASE-X interface card (EC, SFP+) |
40 GE optical interface cards | |
ET1D2L02QSC0 | 2-port 40G BASE-X interface card (SC, QSFP+) |
ET1D2L08QSC0 | 8-port 40G BASE-X interface card (SC, QSFP+) |
Cluster service subcard | |
EH1D2VS08000 | 8-port 10G cluster switching system service unit (SFP+) |
Service processing cards | |
EH1D2PS00P00 | Open Service Platform (OSP) card** |
ET1D2FW00S00 | NGFW Module A,with HW General Security Platform Software |
ET1D2FW00S01 | NGFW Module B,with HW General Security Platform Software |
ET1D2FW00S02 | NGFW Module C,with HW General Security Platform Software |
ET1D2IPS0S00 | IPS Module A,with HW General Security Platform Software |
ACU2 | WLAN ACU2 Access Controller Unit(128 AP Control Resource Included)*** |
Optical transceivers | |
FE-SFP optical transceiver | |
S-SFP-FE-LH40-SM1310 | Optical transceiver, eSFP, FE, single-mode module (1,310 nm, 40 km, LC) |
S-SFP-FE-LH80-SM1550 | Optical transceiver, eSFP, FE, single-mode module (1,550 nm, 80 km, LC) |
GE-SFP optical transceiver | |
SFP-1000BaseT | Copper transceiver, SFP, GE, electrical interface module (100m, RJ45) |
eSFP-GE-SX-MM850 | Optical transceiver, eSFP, GE, multimode module (850 nm, 0.5 km, LC) |
SFP-GE-LX-SM1310 | Optical transceiver, SFP, GE, single-mode module (1,310 nm,10 km, LC) |
S-SFP-GE-LH40-SM1310 | Optical transceiver, eSFP, GE, single-mode module (1,310 nm, 40 km, LC) |
S-SFP-GE-LH40-SM1550 | Optical transceiver, eSFP, GE, single-mode module (1,550 nm, 40 km, LC) |
S-SFP-GE-LH80-SM1550 | Optical transceiver, eSFP, GE, single-mode module (1,550 nm, 80 km, LC) |
eSFP-GE-ZX100-SM1550 | Optical transceiver, eSFP, GE, single-mode module (1,550 nm,100 km, LC) |
10 GE-XFP Optical transceiver | |
XFP-SX-MM850 | Optical transceiver, XFP, 10G, multimode module (850 nm, 0.3 km, LC) |
XFP-STM64-LX-SM1310 | Optical transceiver, XFP, 10G, single-mode module (1,310 nm, 10 km, LC) |
XFP-STM64-LH40-SM1550 | Optical transceiver, XFP, 10G, single-mode module (1,550 nm, 40 km, LC) |
XFP-STM64-SM1550-80 km | Optical transceiver, XFP, 10G, single-mode module (1,550 nm, 80 km, LC) |
10 GE-SFP+ Optical transceiver | |
OMXD30000 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, multimode module (850 nm, 0.3 km, LC) |
OSX010000 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (1,310 nm,10 km, LC) |
OSX040N01 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (1,550 nm, 40 km, LC) |
OSXD22N00 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (1,310 nm, 0.22km, LC,LRM) |
LE2MXSC80FF0 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (1,550 nm, 80 km, LC) (only for 8-port 10G BASE interface cards) |
SFP-10G-USR | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, multimode module (850 nm, 0.1 km, LC) |
SFP-10G-ZR | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (1,550 nm, 80 km, LC) |
SFP-10G-AOC3M | AOC optical transceiver, SFP+, 850 nm, 1G to 10G, 0.003 km |
SFP-10G-AOC10M | AOC optical transceiver, SFP+, 850 nm, 1G to 10G, 0.01 km |
SFP-10G-BXU1 | 10G Base, Bi-Directional (BIDI) optical transceiver, SFP, 10G, single-mode module (TX1270 nm/RX1330 nm, 10 km, LC) |
SFP-10G-BXD1 | 10G Base, BIDI optical transceiver, SFP, 10G, single-mode module (TX1330 nm/RX1270 nm, 10 km, LC) |
SFP-10G-ZCW1511 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (CWDM, 1,511 nm, 70 km, LC) |
SFP-10G-ZCW1471 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (CWDM, 1,471 nm, 70 km, LC) |
SFP-10G-ZCW1491 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (CWDM, 1,491 nm, 70 km, LC) |
SFP-10G-ZCW1531 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (CWDM, 1,531 nm, 70 km, LC) |
SFP-10G-ZCW1551 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (CWDM, 1,551 nm, 70 km, LC) |
SFP-10G-ZCW1571 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (CWDM, 1,571 nm, 70 km, LC) |
SFP-10G-ZCW1591 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (CWDM, 1,591 nm, 70 km, LC) |
SFP-10G-ZCW1611 | Optical transceiver, SFP+, 10G, single-mode module (CWDM, 1,611 nm, 70 km, LC) |
40 GE-QSFP optical transceivers | |
QSFP-40G-SR4 | Optical transceiver, Quad Small Form-Factor Pluggable (QSFP), 40G, multimode module (850 nm, 0.15 km, MPO) (connecting to one QSFP+ optical transceiver) |
QSFP-40G-iSR4 | Optical transceiver, QSFP, 40G, multimode module (850 nm, 0.15 km, MPO) (connecting to four SFP+ optical transceivers) |
QSFP-40G-LR4 | 40G Base-LR4 optical transceiver, QSFP+, 40G, single-mode module (1,310 nm, 10 km, LC) |
QSFP-40G-eiSR4 | 40G Base-SR4 Optical transceiver, QSFP+, 40G, multimode module (850 nm, 0.3 km, MPO) (connecting to four SFP+ optical transceivers) |
BIDI-SFP optical transceivers | |
SFP-FE-LX-SM1310-BIDI | Optical transceiver, eSFP, FE, BIDI single-mode module (TX1310/RX1550, 15 km, LC) |
SFP-FE-LX-SM1550-BIDI | Optical transceiver, eSFP, FE, BIDI single-mode module (TX1550/RX1310, 15 km, LC) |
SFP-GE-LX-SM1310-BIDI | Optical transceiver, eSFP, GE, BIDI single-mode module (TX1310/RX1490,10 km, LC) |
SFP-GE-LX-SM1490-BIDI | Optical transceiver, eSFP, GE, BIDI single-mode module (TX1490/RX1310,10 km, LC) |
LE2MGSC40ED0 | Optical transceiver, SFP, GE, BIDI single-mode module (TX1490/RX1310, 40 km, LC) |
LE2MGSC40DE0 | Optical transceiver, SFP, GE, BIDI single-mode module (TX1310/RX1490, 40 km, LC) |
SFP-GE-BXU1-SC | 1000Base,BIDI Optical Transceiver,SFP,GE,Single-mode Module(TX1490nm/RX1310nm,10km,SC) |
Power modules | |
PAC-2200WF | 2,200W AC power module F (black) |
PDC-2200WF | 2,200W DC power module F (black) |
Software | |
ET1SBSM25000 | S12700 V200R005C00 software |
License | |
ET1SMPLS0000 | MPLS Function License |
ET1SNQA00000 | NQA Function License |
ET1SIPV60000 | IPV6 Function License |
ET1SFIB128K0 | X-series LPU FIB Resource License-128K |
ET1SFIB512K0 | X-series LPU FIB Resource License-512K |
ET1SWL512AP0 | WLAN Access Controller AP Resource License-512AP (with the X-series LPU used) |
ET1SWL128AP0 | WLAN Access Controller AP Resource License-128AP (with the X-series LPU used) |
ET1SWL64AP00 | WLAN Access Controller AP Resource License-64AP (with the X-series LPU used) |
ET1SWL16AP00 | WLAN Access Controller AP Resource License-16AP (with the X-series LPU used) |
L-ACU2-128AP | ACU2 Wireless Access Controller AP Resource License(128 AP) |
L-ACU2-256AP | ACU2 Wireless Access Controller AP Resource License(256 AP) |
L-ACU2-384AP | ACU2 Wireless Access Controller AP Resource License(384 AP) |
L-ACU2-512AP | ACU2 Wireless Access Controller AP Resource License(512 AP) |
Documentation | |
ET1IV2R5C0C0 | S12700 Series Agile Switches Product Documentation (Chinese) |
ET1IV2R5C0E0 | S12700 Series Agile Switches Product Documentation (English) |
* The X1E series cards use ENP chips and provide native AC and unified user management functions.
** The OSP card supports the CheckPoint IPS and F5 ADC load balancer, and can run Windows, SUSE, and VMware operating systems.
*** Each ACU2 card can manage 2K APs. An S12708 switch can have a maximum of 7 ACU2 cards installed and can manage up to 14K APs. An S12712 switch can have a maximum of 11 ACU2 cards installed and can manage up to 22K APs.
In an enterprise campus network
S12700 series switches are deployed on the core layer of an enterprise campus network. Native ACs provided by the S12700 enable customers to build wireless networks without additional AC hardware, reducing network construction costs. The S12700 is the first core switch that provides T-bit AC capabilities, avoiding the performance bottleneck on independent ACs. The native T-bit AC capabilities help customers migrate their wireless networks to 802.11ac. The S12700 series realizes wired and wireless convergence and delivers consistent experience to wired and wireless users through uniform device management, user management, and service management.
In a college campus network
S12700 series switches are deployed on the core layer of a college campus network. The native BRAS on the S12700 reduces network construction costs by removing the need to purchase new BRAS hardware. Each S12700 switch supports 65536 users, allowing a large number of concurrent access users. Its 5-level H-QoS feature implements fine granular user and service management. The S12700 series realizes wired and wireless convergence and delivers consistent experience to wired and wireless users through uniform device management, user management, and service management.
In a bearer network for video conferencing, desktop cloud, and video surveillance applications
The S12700 series has a 1.5 GB buffer to prevent packet loss upon traffic bursts, delivering high-quality video streams. The S12700 series supports up to 1M MAC address entries and 3M FIB entries, which allow access from a large number of terminals and help evolution to IPv6 and the Internet of Things. Employing end-to-end hardware reliability technologies and iPCA technology, the S12700 series offers a highly reliable, high-quality, scalable video conferencing and surveillance solution.
On the core/aggregation layer of a MAN
S12700 series switches are used as core or aggregation switches on the MAN of a television broadcasting network or education network. The 3M FIB entries provided by the S12700 series are sufficient for large-scale routing on the MAN. CSS2 switch fabric hardware clustering technology, originating from clustering technology for high-end core routers, delivers carrier-class reliability on the MAN. Additionally, the S12700 series supports comprehensive L2/L3 MPLS VPN features, providing a highly reliable, secure, and scalable metropolitan bearer network solution.
In an enterprise data center
S12700 series switches are deployed on the core or aggregation layer of an enterprise data center network. The S12700 series has high-density line cards, such as 2*100GE and 48*10GE cards, meeting the requirements for large data throughput on core/aggregation nodes of a data center. Using CSS2 switch fabric hardware clustering technology, the S12700 series provides up to 1.92 Tbps cluster bandwidth and shortens the inter-chassis forwarding latency to 4 μs. This technology helps customers build a data center network with high- performance, high reliability, and low latency.