Hp procurve lan solution family, 4 hp switch positioning – HP 2424M User Manual

Page 8

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HP ProCurve Switch 4000M / 8000M / 2424M / 1600M Reviewer’s Guide

1.4 HP Switch Positioning

HP identifies three different classifications for switches: node/desktop, top-of-stack (both classified as

wiring closet switches) and backbone switches. These areas are loosely defined by the number of

address table entries a switch supports, the speed at which a switch operates, the flexibility/modularity

provided by a switch, and the number of ports supported by a switch. There are also some specialty

areas, such as being able to handle centralized server farms.
Desktop switches are intended for connecting each end node in a workgroup directly to its own switch

port, usually at 10Mbps, with maybe one or two higher-speed ports for fast server connectivity. Top-of-

stack switches have larger address tables and higher throughput speeds. They are designed to

interconnect smaller workgroup switches or shared hubs. Backbone switches are intended to be placed

centrally in a network. Consequently, they have high port counts with flexible port configurations,

ways of dealing with broadcast and multicast traffic, and the ability to provide Layer 3 functionality.

10/100

Mbps

Switches

entry level, unmanaged

HP ProCurve LAN Solution Family

In

cr

ea

si

ng Per

fo

rm

ance

10

Mbps

Hub

Wiring Closet

Backbone

Office

10/100

Mbps

Switch

10

Mbps

Hubs

managed or unmanaged

10

Mbps

Switches

with 2 100 Mbps uplinks

10/100

Mbps

Hubs

managed or unmanaged

10/100

Mbps

Switches

with up to 2 Gigabit links

10/100

Mbps

Switches

flexible chassis configuration

Gigabit Switches

fixed, L2, managed

Gigabit Routing

Switches

fixed, L3, managed

10/100/Gigabit

Routing Switches

flexible chassis configuration

HP

Pro

Cur

ve Q

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ty o

f Se

rvic

e

Switches covered in this guide.

1.4.1 Positioning for the HP ProCurve Switch 4000M/8000M/2424M/1600M

The HP ProCurve Switches 4000M/8000M/2424M/1600M are very flexible wiring closet switches. The

universal slot architecture delivers high port density and media flexibility in a variety of form factors.

The different switches’ form factors are discussed in Section 1.3.1. These switches all have the same

feature set. Features such as Switch Meshing and Port Trunking provide high availability and high

bandwidth capabilities for mission-critical applications. QoS Setting and in-switch tagging allows them

to be 802.1q edge devices to provide end-to-end packet priority setting without requiring the explicit

involvement of end nodes. HP Proactive Networking makes these switches the easiest way to build and

maintain a high-speed network wiring closet.

©1998, 1999, 2000 Hewlett-Packard Co

Revision 3.2b – 1/15/2000

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