
114
C
HAPTER
5: M
ANAGING
THE
C
HASSIS
P
OWER
AND
T
EMPERATURE
Power
Non-Fault-Tolerant
Mode
Power non-fault-tolerant mode is:
■
A user-selectable mode in which 100 percent of the power that can be
allocated to modules is available to them (no power is held in reserve).
■
The default mode for power supplies as shipped.
While the chassis is running in power non-fault-tolerant mode, the
amount of power that is available to modules is determined only by the
number of power supplies that are installed. If a power supply fails while
the chassis is running in non-fault-tolerant mode:
■
Installed modules continue to operate without interruption if the
output of the remaining power supplies is sufficient to provide
adequate power to all installed modules.
■
The EME may shut down selected switch fabric modules and interface
modules to bring installed module power consumption under the
now-reduced power budget. See “Budgeting Power” on page 118 for
more information about how the EME manages power.
Power Fault-Tolerant
Mode
Power fault-tolerant mode
is a user-selectable mode in which power that
is equivalent to one power supply is held in reserve. This reserve power is
not available to installed modules unless a power supply fails, or if you
switch the power mode from power fault-tolerant mode to power
non-fault-tolerant mode.
While the chassis is running in power fault-tolerant mode:
■
All installed power supplies are functioning and contributing power to
the chassis and modules. No single power supply is a dedicated
standby power supply. Rather, a factory-defined power limit ensures
that power that is equivalent to at least one power supply is available
to replace power lost if a power supply fails.
■
The amount of power that installed modules require must not be
greater than the number of installed power supplies, minus one (n-1).
When you reserve power that is equivalent to one power supply in
power fault-tolerant mode, the failure of a single power supply has no
impact on installed modules that are already powered on.
Summary of Contents for 4007
Page 36: ...36 ABOUT THIS GUIDE ...
Page 37: ...I UNDERSTANDING YOUR SWITCH 4007 SYSTEM Chapter 1 Configuration Overview ...
Page 38: ......
Page 50: ...50 CHAPTER 1 CONFIGURATION OVERVIEW ...
Page 52: ......
Page 70: ...70 CHAPTER 3 INSTALLING MANAGEMENT MODULES ...
Page 110: ...110 CHAPTER 4 CONFIGURING AND USING EME OPTIONS ...
Page 130: ...130 CHAPTER 5 MANAGING THE CHASSIS POWER AND TEMPERATURE ...
Page 222: ...222 CHAPTER 11 IP MULTICAST FILTERING WITH IGMP ...
Page 240: ...240 CHAPTER 13 RESILIENT LINKS ...
Page 304: ...304 CHAPTER 14 VIRTUAL LANS VLANS ...
Page 350: ...350 CHAPTER 15 PACKET FILTERING ...
Page 506: ...506 CHAPTER 19 OPEN SHORTEST PATH FIRST OSPF ROUTING ...
Page 534: ...534 CHAPTER 20 IPX ROUTING ...
Page 612: ...612 CHAPTER 22 QOS AND RSVP ...
Page 656: ...656 CHAPTER 23 DEVICE MONITORING ...
Page 657: ...IV REFERENCE Appendix A Technical Support Index ...
Page 658: ......
Page 664: ......