Physically Connected Links Parameter; Priority; On-Failure Mode Parameter - Cisco SFE2000P Installation And Configuration Manual

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Chapter 3
Information About Topology

Physically Connected Links Parameter

If the system consists of more than one device, this parameter defines which link is connected to this
SCE 2000 . Currently the system supports a maximum of two links, which are designated link 0 and link
1.

Priority

In a cascade topology, the user must define the priority of each SCE 2000 .
Note that these defaults apply only when both devices are started together. However, if the primary SCE
2000 fails and then recovers, it will not revert to active status, but remains in standby status, while the
secondary device remains active.

On-Failure Mode Parameter

As described in the section The Bypass Mechanism, the bypass card supports four different modes. The
following two modes are possible when the SCE 2000 is not operational due to platform failure or boot:
The Forwarding mode enables control of traffic flow and is not compatible with the non-operational
status.
In a single SCE 2000 topology, the value of this parameter is determined by whether or not the link can
be completely cut when the SCE 2000 fails, or whether traffic flow should continue across the link in
spite of platform failure.
OL-7824-06
Single SCE 2000 inline installation = " Inline " connection mode.
Single SCE 2000 optical splitter installation = " Receive-only " connection mode.
Two SCE 2000 inline installation = " Inline-cascade " connection mode.
Two SCE 2000 optical splitter installation = " Receive-only-cascade " connection mode.
Primary — The Primary SCE 2000 is active by default
Secondary — The Secondary SCE 2000 is the default standby.
Bypass — The optical splitter forwards traffic with no intervention of the control application
running in the SCE 2000 platform, but monitoring functions continue uninterrupted.
Cutoff — There is no forwarding of traffic. The link is forced down, resulting in traffic cutoff at
Layer1.
Cutoff mode is required for the following:
Redundant inline topology.
Non-redundant inline topology if value-added services are crucial and are more important than
maintaining connectivity.
Bypass mode is required for the following:
Non-redundant inline topology if connectivity is crucial.
Information About Topology Considerations
Cisco SCE 2000 4xGBE Installation and Configuration Guide
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