Cisco Switch 52MP 52-port Gigabit
PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS
- 50 x 10/100/1000 Ports
- 48 x PoE+ Ports with 375 W Power Budget
- 2 x Combo mini-GBIC Ports
- QoS Support
- IPv4 / IPv6 Support
- Advanced Security Management
- Auto Voice VLAN Capabilities
- Energy-Efficient
- Mac, Windows, Linux Compatible
Layer 2 Switching |
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Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) |
Standard 802.1d Spanning Tree support Fast convergence using 802.1w (Rapid Spanning Tree [RSTP]), enabled by default 8 instances are supported Multiple Spanning Tree instances using 802.1s (MSTP) |
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Port grouping |
Support for IEEE 802.3ad Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) ● Up to 8 groups
● Up to 8 ports per group with 16 candidate ports for each (dynamic) 802.3ad link aggregation
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VLAN |
Support for up to 4096 VLANs simultaneously Port-based and 802.1Q tag-based VLANs MAC-based VLAN Management VLAN Private VLAN Edge (PVE), also known as protected ports, with multiple uplinks Guest VLAN Unauthenticated VLAN Dynamic VLAN assignment via Radius server along with 802.1x client authentication CPE VLAN |
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Voice VLAN |
Voice traffic is automatically assigned to a voice-specific VLAN and treated with appropriate levels of QoS. Auto voice capabilities deliver network-wide zero touch deployment of voice endpoints and call control devices. |
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Multicast TV VLAN |
Multicast TV VLAN allows the single multicast VLAN to be shared in the network while subscribers remain in separate VLANs (Also known as MVR) |
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Q-in-Q VLAN |
VLANs transparently cross a service provider network while isolating traffic among customers |
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Generic VLAN Registration Protocol (GVRP)/Generic Attribute Registration Protocol (GARP) |
Protocols for automatically propagating and configuring VLANs in a bridged domain |
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Unidirectional Link Detection (UDLD) |
UDLD monitors physical connection to detect unidirectional links caused by incorrect wiring or cable/port faults to prevent forwarding loops and blackholing of traffic in switched networks |
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Dynamic Host ConfigurationProtocol (DHCP) Relay at Layer 2 |
Relay of DHCP traffic to DHCP server in different VLAN. Works with DHCP Option 82 |
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Internet Group ManagementProtocol (IGMP) versions 1, 2, and3 snooping |
IGMP limits bandwidth-intensive multicast traffic to only the requesters; supports 1K multicast groups (source-specific multicasting is also supported) |
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IGMP Querier |
IGMP querier is used to support a Layer 2 multicast domain of snooping switches in the absence of a multicast router |
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Head-of-line (HOL) blocking |
HOL blocking prevention |
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Jumbo Frames |
Up to 9K (9216) bytes |
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Layer 3 |
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IPv4 routing |
Wirespeed routing of IPv4 packets Up to 512 static routes and up to 128 IP interfaces |
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Classless Inter-Domain Routing(CIDR) |
Support for CIDR |
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Layer 3 Interface |
Configuration of layer 3 interface on physical port, LAG, VLAN interface or Loopback interface |
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DHCP relay at Layer 3 |
Relay of DHCP traffic across IP domains |
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User Datagram Protocol (UDP)relay |
Relay of broadcast information across Layer 3 domains for application discovery or relaying of BootP/DHCP packets |
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DHCP Server |
Switch functions as an IPv4 DHCP Server serving IP addresses for multiple DHCP pools/scopes Support for DHCP options |
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Security |
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Secure Shell (SSH) Protocol |
SSH is a secure replacement for Telnet traffic. SCP also uses SSH. SSH v1 and v2 are supported |
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Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) |
SSL support: Encrypts all HTTPS traffic, allowing highly secure access to the browser-based management GUI in the switch |
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IEEE 802.1X (Authenticator role) |
802.1X: RADIUS authentication and accounting, MD5 hash; guest VLAN; unauthenticated VLAN, single/multiple host mode and single/multiple sessions Supports time-based 802.1X Dynamic VLAN assignment |
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Web Based Authentication |
Web based authentication provides network admission control through web browser to any host devices and operating systems. |
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STP Bridge Protocol Data Unit(BPDU) Guard |
A security mechanism to protect the network from invalid configurations. A port enabled for BPDU Guard is shut down if a BPDU message is received on that port. |
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STP Root Guard |
This prevents edge devices not in the network administrator’s control from becoming Spanning Tree Protocol root nodes. |
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DHCP snooping |
Filters out DHCP messages with unregistered IP addresses and/or from unexpected or untrusted interfaces. This prevents rogue devices from behaving as a DHCP Server. |
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IP Source Guard (IPSG) |
When IP Source Guard is enabled at a port, the switch filters out IP packets received from the port if the source IP addresses of the packets have not been statically configured or dynamically learned from DHCP snooping. This prevents IP Address Spoofing. |
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Dynamic ARP Inspection (DAI) |
The switch discards ARP packets from a port if there is no static or dynamic IP/MAC bindings or if there is a discrepancy between the source or destination address in the ARP packet. This prevents man-in-the-middle attacks. |
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IP/Mac/Port Binding (IPMB) |
The features (DHCP Snooping, IP Source Guard, and Dynamic ARP Inspection) above work together to prevent DOS attacks in the network, thereby increasing network availability. |
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Secure Core Technology (SCT) |
Ensures that the switch will receive and process management and protocol traffic no matter how much traffic is received. |
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Secure Sensitive Data (SSD) |
A mechanism to manage sensitive data (such as passwords, keys, etc) securely on the switch, populating this data to other devices, and secure autoconfig. Access to view the sensitive data as plaintext or encrypted is provided according to the user configured access level and the access method of the user. |
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Layer 2 isolation Private VLAN Edge (PVE) with community VLAN |
PVE (also known as protected ports) provides Layer 2 isolation between devices in the same VLAN, supports multiple uplinks. |
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Port security |
The ability to lock Source MAC addresses to ports, and limits the number of learned MAC addresses. |
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RADIUS/TACACS+ |
Supports RADIUS and TACACS authentication. Switch functions as a client. |
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Storm control |
Broadcast, multicast, and unknown unicast |
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RADIUS accounting |
The RADIUS accounting functions allow data to be sent at the start and end of services, indicating the amount of resources (such as time, packets, bytes, and so on) used during the session. |
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DoS prevention |
Denial-of-Service (DOS) attack prevention |
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ACLs |
Support for up to 512 rules Drop or rate limit based on source and destination MAC, VLAN ID or IP address, protocol, port, differentiated services code point (DSCP)/IP precedence, TCP/UDP source and destination ports, 802.1p priority, Ethernet type, Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) packets, IGMP packets, TCP flag, Time-based ACLs supported. |
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Quality of Service |
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Priority levels |
4 hardware queues |
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Scheduling |
Strict priority and weighted round-robin (WRR) Queue assignment based on DSCP and class of service (802.1p/CoS) |
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Class of service |
Port based; 802.1p VLAN priority based; IPv4/v6 IP precedence/type of service (ToS)/DSCP based; Differentiated Services (DiffServ); classification and re-marking ACLs, trusted QoS. |
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Rate limiting |
Ingress policer; egress shaping and rate control; per VLAN, per port, and flow based. |
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Congestion avoidance |
A TCP congestion avoidance algorithm is required to minimize and prevent global TCP loss synchronization. |
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Standards |
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Standards |
IEEE 802.3 10BASE-T Ethernet, IEEE 802.3u 100BASE-TX Fast Ethernet, IEEE 802.3ab 1000BASE-T Gigabit Ethernet, IEEE 802.3ad LACP, IEEE 802.3z Gigabit Ethernet, IEEE 802.3x Flow Control, IEEE 802.1D (STP, GARP, and GVRP),IEEE 802.1Q/p VLAN, IEEE 802.1w RSTP, IEEE 802.1s Multiple STP, IEEE 802.1X Port Access Authentication, IEEE 802.3af, IEEE 802.3at, RFC 768, RFC 783, RFC 791, RFC 792, RFC 793, RFC 813, RFC 879, RFC 896, RFC 826, RFC 854, RFC 855, RFC 856, RFC 858, RFC 894, RFC 919, RFC 922, RFC 920, RFC 950, RFC 1042, RFC 1071, RFC 1123, RFC 1141, RFC 1155, RFC 1157, RFC 1350, RFC 1533, RFC 1541, RFC 1624, RFC 1700, RFC 1867, RFC 2030, RFC 2616, RFC 2131, RFC 2132, RFC 3164, RFC 3411, RFC 3412, RFC 3413, RFC 3414, RFC 3415, RFC 2576, RFC 4330, RFC 1213, RFC 1215, RFC 1286, RFC 1442, RFC 1451, RFC 1493, RFC 1573, RFC 1643, RFC 1757, RFC 1907, RFC 2011, RFC 2012, RFC 2013, RFC 2233, RFC 2618, RFC 2665, RFC 2666, RFC 2674, RFC 2737, RFC 2819, RFC 2863, RFC 1157, RFC 1493, RFC 1215, RFC 3416 |
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IPv6 |
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IPv6 |
IPv6 host mode IPv6 over Ethernet Dual IPv6/IPv4 stack IPv6 neighbor and router discovery (ND) IPv6 stateless address auto-configuration Path maximum transmission unit (MTU) discovery Duplicate address detection (DAD) ICMP version 6 IPv6 over IPv4 network with Intra-Site Automatic Tunnel Addressing Protocol (ISATAP) support USGv6 and IPv6 Gold Logo certified |
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IPv6 QoS |
Prioritize IPv6 packets in hardware |
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IPv6 ACL |
Drop or rate limit IPv6 packets in hardware |
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IPv6 First Hop Security |
RA guard ND inspection DHCPv6 guard Neighbor binding table (Snooping and static entries) Neighbor binding integrity check |
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Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD v1/2) snooping |
Deliver IPv6 multicast packets only to the required receivers |
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IPv6 applications |
Web/SSL, Telnet server/SSH, ping, traceroute, Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP), Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP), SNMP, RADIUS, syslog, DNS client, Telnet Client, DHCP Client, DHCP Autoconfig, IPv6 DHCP Relay, TACACS |
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IPv6 RFCs supported |
RFC 4443 (which obsoletes RFC2463) – ICMP version 6 RFC 4291 (which obsoletes RFC 3513) – IPv6 address architecture RFC 4291 – IPv6 addressing architecture RFC 2460 – IPv6 specification RFC 4861 (which obsoletes RFC 2461) – Neighbor discovery for IPv6 RFC 4862 (which obsoletes RFC 2462) – IPv6 stateless address auto-configuration RFC 1981 – Path MTU discovery RFC 4007 – IPv6 scoped address architecture RFC 3484 – Default address selection mechanism RFC 5214 (which obsoletes RFC 4214) – ISATAP tunneling RFC 4293 – MIB IPv6: Textual conventions and general group RFC 3595 – Textual conventions for IPv6 flow label |
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Management |
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Web user interface |
Built-in switch configuration utility for easy browser-based device configuration (HTTP/HTTPS). Supports configuration, system dashboard, system maintenance, and monitoring. |
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SNMP |
SNMP versions 1, 2c, and 3 with support for traps, and SNMP version 3 user-based security model (USM) |
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Standard MIBs |
draft-ietf-bridge-8021x-MIB draft-ietf-bridge-rstpmib-04-MIB draft-ietf-hubmib-etherif-MIB-v3-00-MIB draft-ietf-syslog-device-MIB ianaaddrfamnumbers-MIB ianaifty-MIB ianaprot-MIB inet-address-MIB ip-forward-MIB ip-MIB RFC1155-SMI RFC1213-MIB |
rfc2012-MIB rfc2011-MIB draft-ietf-entmib-sensor-MIB lldp-MIB lldpextdot1-MIB lldpextdot3-MIB lldpextmed-MIB p-bridge-MIB q-bridge-MIB rfc1389-MIB rfc1493-MIB rfc1611-MIB rfc1612-MIB rfc1850-MIB |
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Standard MIBs (continued) |
SNMPv2-MIB SNMPv2-SMI SNMPv2-TM RMON-MIB.my dcb-raj-DCBX-MIB-1108-MIB rfc1724-MIB RFC-1212.my_for_MG-Soft rfc1213-MIB rfc1757-MIB RFC-1215.my SNMPv2-CONF.my SNMPv2-TC.my rfc2674-MIB rfc2575-MIB rfc2573-MIB rfc2233-MIB rfc2013-MIB |
rfc1907-MIB rfc2571-MIB rfc2572-MIB rfc2574-MIB rfc2576-MIB rfc2613-MIB rfc2665-MIB rfc2668-MIB rfc2737-MIB rfc2925-MIB rfc3621-MIB rfc4668-MIB rfc4670-MIB trunk-MIB tunnel-MIB udp-MIB |
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Private MIBs |
CISCOSB-lldp-MIB CISCOSB-brgmulticast-MIB CISCOSB-bridgemibobjects-MIB CISCOSB-bonjour-MIB CISCOSB-dhcpcl-MIB CISCOSB-MIB CISCOSB-wrandomtaildrop-MIB CISCOSB-traceroute-MIB CISCOSB-telnet-MIB CISCOSB-stormctrl-MIB CISCOSB-ssh-MIB CISCOSB-socket-MIB CISCOSB-sntp-MIB CISCOSB-smon-MIB CISCOSB-phy-MIB CISCOSB-multisessionterminal-MIB CISCOSB-mri-MIB CISCOSB-jumboframes-MIB CISCOSB-gvrp-MIB CISCOSB-endofmib-MIB CISCOSB-dot1x-MIB CISCOSB-deviceparams-MIB CISCOSB-cli-MIB CISCOSB-cdb-MIB CISCOSB-brgmacswitch-MIB CISCOSB-3sw2swtables-MIB CISCOSB-smartPorts-MIB CISCOSB-tbi-MIB CISCOSB-macbaseprio-MIB CISCOSB-policy-MIB CISCOSB-env_mib CISCOSB-sensor-MIB CISCOSB-aaa-MIB CISCOSB-application-MIB CISCOSB-bridgesecurity-MIB CISCOSB-copy-MIB CISCOSB-CpuCounters-MIB CISCOSB-Custom1BonjourService-MIB |
CISCOSB-ip-MIB CISCOSB-iprouter-MIB CISCOSB-ipv6-MIB CISCOSB-mnginf-MIB CISCOSB-lcli-MIB CISCOSB-localization-MIB CISCOSB-mcmngr-MIB CISCOSB-mng-MIB CISCOSB-physdescription-MIB CISCOSB-Poe-MIB CISCOSB-protectedport-MIB CISCOSB-rmon-MIB CISCOSB-rs232-MIB CISCOSB-SecuritySuite-MIB CISCOSB-snmp-MIB CISCOSB-specialbpdu-MIB CISCOSB-banner-MIB CISCOSB-syslog-MIB CISCOSB-TcpSession-MIB CISCOSB-traps-MIB CISCOSB-trunk-MIB CISCOSB-tuning-MIB CISCOSB-tunnel-MIB CISCOSB-udp-MIB CISCOSB-vlan-MIB CISCOSB-ipstdacl-MIB CISCO-SMI-MIB CISCOSB-DebugCapabilities-MIB CISCOSB-CDP-MIB CISCOSB-vlanVoice-MIB CISCOSB-EVENTS-MIB CISCOSB-sysmng-MIB CISCOSB-sct-MIB CISCO-TC-MIB CISCO-VTP-MIB CISCO-CDP-MIB CISCOSB-eee-MIB CISCOSB-ssl-MIB |
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Private MIBs(continued) |
CISCOSB-dhcp-MIB CISCOSB-dlf-MIB CISCOSB-dnscl-MIB CISCOSB-embweb-MIB CISCOSB-fft-MIB CISCOSB-file-MIB CISCOSB-greeneth-MIB CISCOSB-interfaces-MIB CISCOSB-interfaces_recovery-MIB |
CISCOSB-qosclimib-MIB CISCOSB-digitalkeymanage-MIB CISCOSB-tbp-MIB CISCOSMB-MIB CISCOSB-secsd-MIB CISCOSB-draft-ietf-entmib-sensor-MIB CISCOSB-draft-ietf-syslog-device-MIB CISCOSB-rfc2925-MIB |
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Remote Monitoring (RMON) |
Embedded RMON software agent supports 4 RMON groups (history, statistics, alarms, and events) for enhanced traffic management, monitoring, and analysis |
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IPv4 and IPv6 dual stack |
Coexistence of both protocol stacks to ease migration |
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Firmware upgrade |
● Web browser upgrade (HTTP/HTTPS) and TFTP and upgrade over SCP running over SSH
● Upgrade can be initiated through console port as well
● Dual images for resilient firmware upgrades
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Port mirroring |
Traffic on a port can be mirrored to another port for analysis with a network analyzer or RMON probe. Up to 8 source ports can be mirrored to one destination port. A single session is supported. |
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VLAN mirroring |
Traffic from a VLAN can be mirrored to a port for analysis with a network analyzer or RMON probe. Up to 8 source VLANs can be mirrored to one destination port. A single session is supported. |
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DHCP (Options 12, 66, 67, 82, 129, and 150) |
DHCP Options facilitate tighter control from a central point (DHCP server) to obtain IP address, auto-configuration (with configuration file download), DHCP relay, and hostname. |
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Secure Copy (SCP) |
Securely transfer files to and from the switch |
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Autoconfiguration with Secure Copy (SCP) file download |
Enables secure mass deployment with protection of sensitive data |
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Text-editable config files |
Config files can be edited with a text editor and downloaded to another switch, facilitating easier mass deployment |
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Smartports |
Simplified configuration of QoS and security capabilities |
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Auto Smartports |
Applies the intelligence delivered through the Smartport roles and applies it automatically to the port based on the devices discovered over CDP or LLDP-MED. This facilitates zero touch deployments. |
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Textview CLI |
Scriptable command-line interface. A full CLI as well as a menu-based CLI is supported. User privilege levels 1, 7, and 15 is supported for the CLI. |
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Cloud services |
Support for Cisco Small Business FindIT Network and Cisco OnPlus |
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Localization |
Localization of GUI and documentation into multiple languages |
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Other management |
Traceroute; single IP management; HTTP/HTTPS; SSH; RADIUS; port mirroring; TFTP upgrade; DHCP client; BOOTP; SNTP; Xmodem upgrade; cable diagnostics; ping; syslog; Telnet client (SSH secure support) |
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Time-based port operation |
Link up or down based on user-defined schedule (when the port is administratively up) |
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Login banner |
Configurable multiple banners for web as well as CLI |
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Power Efficiency |
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EEE Compliant (802.3az) |
Supports 802.3az on all copper ports (SG300 models) |
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Energy Detect |
Automatically turns off power off on Gigabit Ethernet and 10/100 RJ-45 port when detecting link down Active mode is resumed without loss of any packets when the switch detects the link up |
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Cable length detection |
Adjusts the signal strength based on the cable length for Gigabit Ethernet models. Reduces the power consumption for cables shorter than 10m. |
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Disable port LEDs |
LEDs can be manually turned off to save on Energy |
- 48 x PoE+ Ports with 375 W Power Budget
- 52
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