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Cisco Nexus 7000 aims for data center dominance

Giant switch wins high marks for uptime, resiliency; throughput hindered by current line cards
By David Newman , Network World , 09/01/2008
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Building a big data center and looking for a switch to match? How do 256 10 Gigabit Ethernet ports and nearly 1.7 terabits of capacity sound?


How we tested Cisco's switch
Archive of Network World tests

That's what Cisco is offering with its brand new Nexus 7000 Series data center switches. Intending these boxes to be a data-center mainstay for the next decade, Cisco has constructed the Nexus switches to be far larger than its current high-end offerings.

Indeed, this exclusive Network World Clear Choice Test was the biggest we've ever conducted. Cisco's engineers told us they too had never before tested at this scale. Besides performance, we also assessed the Nexus in terms of features, usability and high availability and resiliency (see "How we did it").

Performance turned out to be only fair, in part because current line cards tap just a fraction of the switch's 1.691Tbps capacity. Resiliency, useful features and a modular design are what really make the Nexus switch an interesting contender in data-center switching.

The layered look

While modularity has long been a part of chassis-based switches, the Nexus extends this approach with a layered, redundant approach in both hardware and software. The switch uses a mid-plane design with up to five 230Gbps fabric cards and, in the Nexus 7010 version we tested, up to eight line cards and two management cards. A larger 7018 chassis, due to ship by year's end, will support up to 16 line cards and up to 512 10G Ethernet ports. Significantly targeted for data-center use, Nexus switches also support Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) cards, but we did not test these.

The management cards are beefier than those on current high-end Catalyst 6500s, featuring dual-core Xeon processors and 4GB of memory. A new operating system, dubbed NX OS, takes advantage of the extra horsepower, as do the system's larger routing tables and virtualization features.

On the software side, NX OS's modular design differs from Cisco's venerable and monolithic IOS. With the Linux-based NX OS, each layer-2 and layer-3 protocol runs as a separate process. If there's a problem with one process, it won't affect other parts of the system – something our test results demonstrated. The switch still supports the familiar IOS command-line interface (CLI), but it too is just another process.

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Comments (22)
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new file engine searchBy Anonymous on October 24, 2008, 3:42 pm Download it from http://newfileengine.com/

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re: Oversubcribed a bit??By Anon on September 17, 2008, 5:30 amYou state "The Nexus 7000 is delivering 80Gbps per slot of usable bandwidth today, providing up to 64 linerate 10G ports in the 10-slot and 128 linerate 10G ports...

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FCoE line cards supported on Nexus 7010?By Anonymous on September 12, 2008, 12:40 pmThe article says - "Nexus switches also support Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) cards, but we did not test these." If this is true, why the FCoE line cards...

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its not really modular...By Anon on September 8, 2008, 1:17 pmIf you have to upgrade the SUP to support that new linecard, and find out its not compatible with the some or all of the old line cards... OR... the old linecards...

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Have you actually ever run aBy Anon on September 8, 2008, 1:00 pmHave you actually ever run a network? This is one of the advantages of a modular architecture. No forklift upgrades! I can upgrade line card by line card as my...

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