Related Publications; Terminology - ProCurve 2626 Management And Configuration Manual

Switch 2600 series switch 2600-pwr series switch 2800 series switch 4100 series switch 6108
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Related Publications

This chapter introduces general PoE operation, PoE configuration and
monitoring commands, and event log messages related to PoE operation on
the ProCurve Series 2600-PWR switches. The following two manuals provide
further information:
For information on installation, refer to the ProCurve Series 2600
Switches Installation and Reference Guide provided with the switch.
To help you plan and implement a PoE system in your network, refer
to the PoE Planning and Implementation Guide, which is available
from either of the following sources:
The Documentation CD-ROM (version 3.5 or greater) shipped with
your Series 2600-PWR switch
The ProCurve website at http://www.procurve.com. (Click on Technical
support, then Product manuals.)

Terminology

The following PoE terms and concepts are used in this manual.
Term
Use in this Manual
active PoE port A PoE-enabled port connected to a PD requesting power.
priority class
Refers to the type of power prioritization where the switch uses Low (the default), High, and
Critical priority assignments to determine which groups of ports will receive power. Note that
power priority rules apply only if PoE provisioning on the switch becomes oversubscribed.
EPS
External Power Supply; for exam ple, a ProCurve 600 RPS/EPS or a ProCurve 610 EPS. An EPS
device provides power to provision PoE ports on a switch. See also "RPS" below.
MPS
Maintenance Power Signature; the signal a PD send s to the switch to indicate that the PD is
connected and requires power. Refer to Figure 11-4 on page 13.
PD
Powered Device. A device that receives power through a direct connection to a 10/100
Base-TX PoE RJ-45 port on the switch. Examples of PDs include Voice-over-IP (VoIP)
telephones, wireless access points, and remote video cameras.
port-number
Refers to the type of power prioritization where, within a priority class, the switch assigns
priority
the highest priority to the lowest-numbered port, the second-highest priority to the second
lowest-numbered port, and so-on. Note that power priority rules apply only if PoE provisioning
on the switch becomes oversubscribed.
RPS
Redundant Power Supply; for example, a ProC urve 600 RPS/EPS. An RPS device provides
power to a switch if the switch's internal power supply fails. RPS power does not provision
PoE ports on a switch whose internal power supply has failed. See also "EPS" above.
Power Over Ethernet (PoE) Operation for the Series 2600-PWR Switches
Overview
11-3

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