Identifying the ports, Identifying the ports -25 – Avaya 580 User Manual

Page 445

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Document No. 10-300077, Issue 2

13-25

Configuring Access Lists

Identifying the Ports

The chassis is organized by slots, fabric ports, PREs or F-chips, and
physical ports. The number of F-Chips and physical ports varies according
to the module type. This information helps you distribute the workload
evenly among resources and identify possible choke points:

Every Fabric port can manage up to 4 F-Chips

Slot 1 has 1 Fabric port only

Slots 2-7 (P580) and Slots 2-17 (P882) have 2 Fabric ports per slot

The Supervisor has 1 F-chip (FORE)

The 8-port GigE has 8 F-Chips (4 per Fabric port)

The 4-port GigE has 4 F-Chips (2 per Fabric port)

The 24-port Ethernet modules (copper or fiber) have 2 F-Chips (1
per Fabric port). Physical Ports 1-12 correspond with F-Chip 1, and
Physical Ports 13-24 correspond with F-Chip 2.

The 48-port Ethernet has 4 F-Chips (2 per Fabric port) with the
following Physical Port to F-Chip correspondence: ports 1-12: F-
Chip 1, ports 13-24: F-Chip 2, ports 25-36: F-Chip 3, ports 37-48:
F-Chip 4.

Fabric ports are numbered regardless of whether other slots are empty or
full.

F-Chips numbers are associated with their respective Fabric ports. To locate
the Fabric port and F-Chip for a physical port, you must know the media
type and slot.

For example, Physical port 20 on a 24-port Ethernet module that is in slot 4
of the chassis is identified by Fabric Port 7 and F-Chip 2. This will be
displayed as Chip 7/2. These absolute addresses are not affected by the
placement or type of other modules.

Table 13-3

shows the slots, fabric ports, PREs or F-chips, and physical ports

of the switch.

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