Cisco MGX MGX 8800 Hardware Installation Manual page 371

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Chapter 4
Planning for Card Redundancy, Line Redundancy, and Bulk Distribution
SRM cards support 1:N redundancy in the following modes:
The following subsections describe how 1:N redundancy operates in these two configurations and
provide guidelines for installing cards to support 1:N redundant configurations.
1:N Redundancy without Bulk Distribution
When 1:N redundancy is used without bulk distribution, you must install a special redundancy back card
for each 1:N redundant card set as shown in
on it and is installed behind the standby card.
If an active card in the 1:N redundant card set fails, the standby card takes over, and the SRM routes
communications from the standby back card through the special redundancy back card, and over to the
back card behind the failed card. This configuration allows the standby card to use the lines connected
to the back card behind the failed primary card.
Figure 4-3
The rerouting of the line communications takes place over a single redundancy bus, one of which is
installed in each bay of a Cisco MGX 8850switch. A MGX 8830 or MGX 8830/B switch has one
redundancy bus, and MGX 8850 (PXM1E/PXM45), MGX 8850/B, and MGX 8880 switches have two,
one for each bay. The redundancy bus is available to only one 1:N redundant card set at a time, so if any
1:N protected card fails in a bay, the redundancy bus is unavailable to all other 1:N redundant card sets.
To support 1:N redundancy without bulk distribution, cards must be installed according to the following
guidelines:
Releases 2 - 5.2, Part Number OL-4545-01, Rev. H0, May 2006
1:N redundancy without bulk distribution
1:N redundancy with bulk distribution
Example 1:N Redundant Configuration without Bulk Distribution
Primary
Primary
CBSM T1/E1
CBSM T1/E1
front card
front card
Primary
Primary
CBSM T1/E1
CBSM T1/E1
back card
back card
The SRM-3T3/C, SRME, and SRME/B cards provide 1:N card redundancy for 8-port AUSM,
FRSM, CESM, MPSM, and VISM-PR cards that use T1 and E1 lines. Refer to
specific service module supports 1:N card redundancy.
All cards in a 1:N redundant card set (without bulk distribution) must have back cards. Each primary
card must have an appropriate back card with line connections, and the secondary card must have
the appropriate redundancy back card.
The primary back cards in a 1:N redundancy set must all be of the same interface type. For example,
all of the cards should be either T1 or E1 back cards. Do not mix interface types in the same
redundancy set.
When the secondary card is an AUSM, CESM, FRSM, or VISM, all cards in a 1:N redundant card
set must be of the same type. For example, a FRSM-8T1 can act as a standby card for other
FRSM-8T1 cards; it cannot serve as a standby card for an AUSM-8T1/B.
Planning Standalone and Redundant Card Configurations
Figure
4-3. This redundancy back card has no connectors
Secondary
SRM front
CBSM T1/E1
card
front card
Redundancy
SRM back
back card
card
Cisco MGX 8800/8900 Series Hardware Installation Guide
Table 4-1
to see if a
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