LAG Overview

For example, if you have a LAG with one 100M port and one 1000M port, you can configure the weighted distribution to be 10% for the 100M port and 90% for the 1000M port by specifying weights

What Is a Core Switch?

Explore what a core switch does, why it''s essential for enterprise networks, and how to choose the right model. Includes real-world applications and Cisco/Huawei/Aruba model comparison.

Solved: Why a coreswitch?

Having a core switch always depends on the network. On small networks with a couple of servers and a few clients, there''s no actual need of a

Data Center Network Switch Design

By following these design and deployment strategies, you can achieve a high-performance, highly available, and secure network architecture that meets the needs of your

Will multiple switches slow transfer speed

If with ''transfer speed'' you mean throughput: It should not matter much. Every extra device will introduce some minor latency (after all some processing is needed, if if it is only very minor). However latency

Performance recommendations

When some of those requests cannot be handled with reasonably low latency or without errors, this can stress an API gateway instance''s performance. On the other hand, Spring Cloud

Configuring Ports and LAGs on AOS-CX

A LAG combines a number of physical ports together to make a single high-bandwidth data path. LAGs can connect two switches to provide a higher-bandwidth connection to a public network.

Ping Latency Issues

When I Ping my Gateway I intermittently get spikes in time. It will be less than 10ms mostly but every so often I get a spike anywhere from 100+ to 600ms. How can I find what is causing

What Is a Core Switch in a Network?

Define the core switch—the central, high-speed backbone required for aggregating and routing massive volumes of enterprise network traffic.

Solved: Stacking and Lag

I''m going to use two XOS based core switches, and a pair of X435 switches in my example below, you can extrapolate from there. Setting up an

LAG on switches

Just curious if there is a common practice for how many ports to include in a LAG (in Netgear terms, a Link Aggregation Group, what Windows Server calls NIC Teaming). My current

Core Switch

Most MC-LAG systems allow dual homing across only two paths; in practice, MC-LAG systems are limited to dual core switches because it is extremely difficult to maintain a coherent state between

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