Installing the Switch
8
Applications
This switch segments your network, significantly increasing both bandwidth and
throughput. Any port on the switch can be attached to a hub (a shared collision
domain) or provide a dedicated link to a single network device (such as a workstation
or server). When a port on the switch is connected to a hub (a 10 or 100 Mbps
repeater), the bandwidth provided by that port is shared by all the devices connected
to the attached hub. However, when a port is connected to an end node or to a
device that breaks up the collision domain (e.g., another switch, bridge or router),
the attached device has access to the full bandwidth provided by that port.
Bridging Functions
- This switch provides fully transparent bridging functions.
It automatically learns node addresses, that are subsequently used to filter and
forward all traffic based on the destination address. When traffic passes between
devices attached to the same shared collision domain, those packets are filtered
from the switch. But when traffic must be passed between unique segments (i.e.,
different ports on the switch), the high-speed switching fabric forwards the packets
at near zero latency.
Switching Functions
- Store-and-forward switching is used to forward traffic to
other ports. This scheme ensures data integrity and provides a clean data stream.
Flexible Configuration
- This switch is not only designed to segment your network,
but also to provide a wide range of options in setting up network connections. It can
be used as a simple stand-alone switch; or connected with standard repeater hubs,
switches, or other network interconnection devices in various configurations.
Media Expansion Options
- You can use a fiber module to support applications
such as high-speed file servers, or for connecting to a collapsed fiber backbone
switch.