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Cisco ASR 1000 Series Aggregation Services Routers Hardware Installation Guide
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Chapter 1 Cisco ASR 1000 Series Routers Hardware Overview
Functional Overview
Note
The Cisco ASR 1002-F Router and Cisco ASR 1002-X Router use the same accessories as
the Cisco ASR 1002 Router.
–
For the Cisco ASR 1013 Router, the cable-management brackets contain four independent
cable-management U features to provide cable dressing for modules. There are two brackets
with four U-feature hooks for each side of the chassis.
–
For the Cisco ASR 1001 Router, the cable-management bracket contains one independent
cable-management U feature to provide cable dressing for each card module slot.
Functional Overview
This section contains the following topics:
•
Chassis Slot and Logical Interface Numbering, page 1-8
•
MAC Address Information, page 1-8
•
Online Insertion and Removal, page 1-9
•
Environmental Monitoring and Reporting Functions, page 1-10
Chassis Slot and Logical Interface Numbering
The Cisco ASR 1000 Series Routers have a slot numbering system located on both sides of the card
module location. The chassis slots are physically numbered from zero starting at the bottom of the
chassis. This section describes the slot numbering for the Cisco ASR 1000 Series Routers:
Cisco ASR 1000 Series SPA Interface Processor (SIP) subslots begin their numbering with “0” and have
a horizontal orientation. The SIP subslot numbering is indicated by a small numeric label beside the
subslot on the faceplate. Some commands allow you to display information about the SPA itself, such as
show idprom module
and
show hw-module subslot
. These commands require you to specify both the
physical location of the SIP and SPA in the format, Slot/Subslot, where:
•
Slot—Specifies the chassis slot number in the Cisco ASR 1000 Series Routers where the SIP is
installed.
•
Subslot—Specifies a subslot of the SIP where the SPA is installed.
•
Superslots (power zone 0 and power zone 1)—Specifies the Cisco ASR 1013 Router slot spacing
divided into zones.
Note
See the router-specific chapter for chassis slot numbering and naming descriptions.
MAC Address Information
The
Media Access Control (MAC)
or
hardware
address is a standardized data link layer address that is
required for certain network interface types. These addresses are specific and unique to each port and
are not used by other devices in the network. The Cisco ASR 1000 Series Routers assign and control the
MAC addresses of its shared port adapters.
You can identify shared port adapter slots by using software commands. To display information about: