Datasheet

Data Sheet
© 2008 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public Information. Page 2 of 5
The Cisco SFE2010P provides resilient stacking for up to four units, or 192 ports. A stack of units
is managed as a single switch with one web management interface. The SFE2010P switch can
coexist in a stack with the Cisco SFE2000 and SFE2000P 24-Port 10/100 Ethernet Switches and
the Cisco SFE2010 48-Port 10/100 Ethernet Switch, for a maximum of 192 ports in a stack. The
stacking capability includes master/backup unit behavior, ring and chain architecture, and hot
insertion and removal of units.
Software running on the Cisco SFE2010P switch interacts with provisioning, management, and
security software on both the site’s services router and the service provider’s equipment. This
interaction provides simple, one-step installation and access to web-administered features for the
administrator and users. Simple, affordable network operations throughout the network’s lifetime
are the result.
Features
Forty-eight 10/100 Ethernet ports
Two 10/100/1000 Ethernet ports (used as stacking ports if operated in stacking mode)
Two mini Gigabit Interface Converter (mini-GBIC) slots for fiber Gigabit Ethernet expansion
IEEE 802.3af PoE delivered over any of the forty-eight 10/100 ports
15.4W available power to the Fast Ethernet ports for PoE-enabled wireless access points
or VoIP handsets (maximum per-switch PoE delivery of 360W available for all ports)
Dual images for resilient firmware upgrades
17.6-Gbps, nonblocking, store-and-forward switching capacity
Simplified QoS management enabled by queuing techniques using 802.1p, Differentiated
Services (DiffServ), or type of service (ToS) traffic prioritization
Power redundancy when used with the Cisco RPS1000 380W Redundant Power Supply
Unit
Fully resilient stacking for optimized growth with simplified management
ACLs for granular security and QoS implementation
Configuration and monitoring from a standard web browser
Secure remote management of the switch via Secure Shell (SSH) and SSL encryption
802.1Q-based VLANs enable segmentation of networks for improved performance and
security
Private VLAN Edge (PVE) simplifies network isolation of guest connections or autonomous
networks
Automatic configuration of VLANs across multiple switches through Generic VLAN
Registration Protocol (GVRP) and Generic Attribute Registration Protocol (GARP)
User/network port-level security via 802.1X authentication and MAC-based filtering
Increased bandwidth and added link redundancy with Link Aggregation Control Protocol
(LACP)
Enhanced rate-limiting capabilities, including back pressure and multicast and broadcast
flood control
Port mirroring for noninvasive monitoring of switch traffic
Mini jumbo frame support (1632 bytes)