Optelecom-nkf XSNet 2800 SW User Manual Download Page 25

 

 

25

 

13. Safety, EMC, ESD 

 

General 

The safety information contained in this section, and on other 
pages of this manual, must be observed whenever this unit is 
operated, serviced, or repaired. Failure to comply with any 
precaution, warning, or instruction noted in the manual is in 
violation of the standards of design, manufacture, and 
intended use of the unit. 
Installation, adjustment, maintenance and repair of this 
equipment are to be performed by trained personnel aware of 
the hazards involved. For correct and safe use of the 
equipment and in order to keep the equipment in a safe 
condition, it is essential that both operating and servicing 
personnel follow standard safety procedures in addition to the 
safety precautions and warnings specified in this manual, and 
that this unit be installed in locations accessible to trained 
service personnel only.

 

Optelecom-NKF assumes no liability for the customer’s 
failure to comply with any of these safety requirements. 

 
UL/IEC/EN

 

60950-1: General safety requirements

 

The equipment described in this manual has been designed 
and tested according to the UL/IEC/EN 60950-1 safety 
requirements. 

If there is any doubt regarding the safety of the equipment, do 
not put it into operation.

 This might be the case when the 

equipment shows physical damage or is stressed beyond 
tolerable limits (e.g. during storage and transportation). 

Before opening the equipment, disconnect it from all power 
sources.

 The equipment must be powered by a SELV

*)

 power 

supply. 

 

When this unit is operated in extremely elevated temperature 
conditions, it is possible for internal and external metal 
surfaces to become extremely hot. 

 
EMC 

The equipment has been tested and found to meet the CE-
regulations relating to EMC, and complies with the limits 
for a Class B device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC rules. 

These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection 
against interference to radio communications in any 
installation. The equipment generates, uses and can radiate 
radio frequency energy; improper use or special circumstances 
may cause interference to other equipment or a performance 
decrease due to interference radiated by other equipment. In 
such cases, the user will have to take appropriate measures to 
reduce such interactions between this and other equipment. 

Any interruption of the shielding inside or outside the 
equipment could cause the equipment to be more prone to fail 
EMC requirements. 

Non-video signal lines must use appropriate shielded CAT5 
cabling (S-FTP), or at least an equivalent. 
If system components, such as cabling (e.g. coaxial cable, 
data/audio/cc wiring) and/or the units, are used outdoors, 
ensure that 

all 

electrically connected components are 

carefully earthed and protected against surges (high voltage 
transients caused by switching or lightning). 

 

ESD 

Electrostatic discharge (ESD) can damage or destroy 
electronic components. Proper precautions should be 
taken against ESD when opening the equipment.

 

 

*)

 SELV: conforming to IEC 60950-1, <60V

DC

 output, output 

voltage galvanically isolated from mains. All power supplies or 
power supply cabinets available from Optelecom-NKF comply 
with these SELV requirements. 

14. Technical specifications

 

 

XSNet2800 SW 

 

2800/SM-

10 BiDi 

2800/SM-

60, 

/CWDM-

λ

 

2800 

/MM

 

Optical

 

 

Optical ports 

2 x 100/1000 Base-FX 

Output wavelength 

1310 nm, 
or 
1310/1490 

1550, or 
CWDM 

850 nm 

Laser type 

On request (SFP package dependent) 

Receiver PIN 

On request (SFP package dependent) 

fibre type 

2x2x SM 
or 2x1x 
SM (BiDi) 

2x2x SM 

2x2x MM 

Housing 

SFP (MSA compliant) 

Optical span 

10 km 

60 km  

> 2 km 

Min. fibre length 

2 m 

2m  or 
>10 km 
(CWDM) 

2 m 

Performance 

Address table size 

4k entries 

Switching method 

store and forward 

Switching fabric  

non- blocking 

Ethernet I/Os 

Number of ports 

10 

10/100Base-TX 802.3u 

                       8 

1000Base-FX 2 
Full-duplex 802.3x 

yes 

Standards 

IEEE 802.3/u/z 

10Base-T, 100Base-TX, 1000Base-FX 

IEEE 802.3x 

Full-duplex operation 

IEEE 802.1d 

Spanning Tree Protocol 

IEEE 802.1/t/w/z 

Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol 

IEEE 802.1p 

QoS 

IEEE 802.1Q 

Tagged VLAN 

RFC 2236 

IGMP v2 

Powering

 

Power consumption 

12 W

 

Supply current 

1.2 A 

Rack-mount units 

MC 1x power supply cabinets 

Stand-alone units 
(/SA) 

11 to 19 Vdc  

(PSA 12 DC/25) or PSR 12 DC 

Management

 

LED status indicators 

DC LED 

Sync Gb port 9, 10 

 

LED port 1 t/m 8 

 

power- on indicator OK = GREEN 
link = GREEN; link activity = 
blinking GREEN ; no link = off 
10 Mb = YELLOW ; 100 Mb = 
GREEN; blink is activity 

Network management 

protocols 

SNM

 compatible - out-of-band 

SNMP v2, http, MX/IP

 - in-band 

Environmental and safety

 

Operating temperature 

-40 to + 74

°

Relative humidity 

< 95 % (no condensation) 

MTBF 

> 100,000 h 

General safety 

IEC/EN 60950-1 

UL recognition file 

E242498 

Laser safety 

IEC 60825-1, IEC 60825-2 

EMC emission 

EN 55022 (class B), 

FCC 47 CFR 15 (class B) 

EMC immunity 

EN 55024, EN 50130-4, EN 61000-6-2 

Mechanical

 

Optical connectors 

duplex LC 

Network connectors 

RJ45 (8x) 

Dimensions 

128 mm x 34 mm x 190 mm (14TE) 

Weight (approx.) 

900 gram 

Housing  

rack-mount or stand-alone 

 

Summary of Contents for XSNet 2800 SW

Page 1: ...XSNet 2800 SW Firmware v 3 Field hardened layer 2 Ethernet switch with 2 optical Gbit uplinks 8 10 100Base T ports USER MANUAL Optelecom NKF 2006 Version v 1 0b 060203 1b XSNet2800SWv3 MW03SP2...

Page 2: ...et 2800 network settings 8 4 XSNet 2800 SW alarms 9 5 2800 SW VLANs 10 VLAN Control and VLAN Port Control 11 Settings example 12 Application example 13 6 XSNet 2800 SW Quality of Service QoS 14 7 XSNe...

Page 3: ...form of double width 14TE Eurocassettes fitting in MC 11 or similar power supply cabinets or as stand alone units SA option Device configuration can be performed in band using the built in http serve...

Page 4: ...circulation moisture lockout and prevention of dust or grime accumulation are always desirable The switch will power up in a few seconds performing auto negotiation on the 100 Mbit ports The Spanning...

Page 5: ...ware A standard Web browser will suffice to find the module by its IP address Activate the LOGIN button on the login screen that will appear see figure 1 below After the Connect box appears see below...

Page 6: ...o another active device panes sections showing parameter values some of which are editable buttons mainly SAVE REFRESH and CANCEL for sections with editable fields Writing changes into the device afte...

Page 7: ...Module status field On this page only the 32 character labels can be edited please activate the SAVE button if after making changes you wish to make them definitive and active However if you decide to...

Page 8: ...and Gateway settings show subnet mask and default gateway Assuming the device IP address and subnet mask are already set correctly only the default gateway needs to be defined in order to connect the...

Page 9: ...also means the alarm will actually go off if a certain condition is met For the 2800 SW these conditions are Power supply alarm Indicates an active power supply alarm 2V5 or 3V3 outside 5 of their nom...

Page 10: ...f more than one VLAN is of course allowed untag i e remove Q tags indicating that tags holding VLAN and priority information should be removed from the output For a port connected to another switch th...

Page 11: ...ress rules set in the VLAN Port Control pane see figures 8 and 11 If VLANs are enabled the following ingress options are available incoming Q tagged frames can be modified as follows see figure 9 they...

Page 12: ...e 11 If set this has prevalence over tag insertion or modification Settings example With VLANs enabled a port connected to another switch a non edge port generally would be set to drop non Q frames in...

Page 13: ...g to the device for computers connected to SW1 ports 5 6 and SW2 ports 7 8 similarly use VLAN ID 5 Both switches ports 9 ingress Q frames must be left as they are non Q frames are to be blocked egress...

Page 14: ...al to the TCI threshold and up go into the high priority queue TCI tag control information Fulfilling either of these two conditions see the arrows in figure 13 will get a frame into the high priority...

Page 15: ...manager Often these are public mainly used for the read and trap communities and private or netman for read write operations The manager software may offer additional choices Traps Traps generated by...

Page 16: ...ber of variables can be read out and in a few cases be edited and set Many 2800 SW variables are contained in the system and interfaces sections of RFC1213 MIB Others are found in RFC1493 bridge MIB R...

Page 17: ...vice Viewed from the root device all ports connecting to the root ports of designated switches are assigned as designated ports After determining the lowest cost spanning tree the RSTP enables all roo...

Page 18: ...t port The allowed range is between 0 255 Its default setting is 128 The lowest number has the highest priority Path Cost Specifies the path cost of the port The Switch uses this to determine which po...

Page 19: ...partake in the STP configuration the ports are all forwarding see figure 18 To force full compatibility with STP only equipment from the start you will need additional MX configuration software set t...

Page 20: ...h handles multicasting Transmitter mode the switch will block all outgoing multicast traffic for this port Multicast traffic entering the port from outside will pass so this is a switch entry port for...

Page 21: ...setting duplex half duplex and link speed per port manually The negotiation results appear in the speed duplex and pause the switch is able to send and receive pause frames columns If auto negotiatio...

Page 22: ...loads are represented in figure 21 Transmit and receive port loads are shown in terms of maximum loads per port in the upper two graphs while received packet size and error statistics are depicted in...

Page 23: ...age however always makes the switch reboot with the option Reboot the switch will retain all its settings when rebooting with the option Keep settings under Restore default settings figure 24 This can...

Page 24: ...operational any setting will do nothing reboot keep settings reboot the switch without changing settings reboot restore factory defaults resets all values erase network settings and reboot keep setti...

Page 25: ...use the equipment to be more prone to fail EMC requirements Non video signal lines must use appropriate shielded CAT5 cabling S FTP or at least an equivalent If system components such as cabling e g c...

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