Thursday, July 27, 2017

The New Cisco Catalyst 9000 Series Switches, the New Design

Cisco launched the star Catalyst Switches-Cisco Catalyst 9000 Series Switches.

The new Cisco Catalyst 9000 Family of switches consists of the best stackable access switch, Catalyst 9300; the only modular chassis that supports In-Service Software Upgrade (ISSU) in the campus space, Catalyst 9400; and the first 40G aggregation switch in the enterprise space, Catalyst 9500.


The Catalyst 9000 Family solves some persistent challenges of enterprise networks by utilizing platform innovations built around four key areas: security, Internet of Things (IoT) convergence, mobility and cloud readiness.

Catalyst 9000 series is a “beautiful” switch. And there are some of the design choices that make the 

Catalyst 9000 the industry’s most aesthetic switches.
  • Rounded frame without sharp corners – “yes” you can keep touching!
  • Ergonomic pullout handles on the Catalyst 9400 enable better weight distribution – you will not break your back lifting these switches!
  • Innovative slide-out ejectors with latch on the uplink modules of Catalyst 9500 – no more screwdrivers!
  • Molded plastic covers ejectors, screws and handles on field replaceable units – no gloves required!
  • Industry standard icons now advertise the capabilities of the switch – a truly universal switch!

The Catalyst 9000 series of switches redefines convenience and usability – it is time to make the switch.

Design Change we can make in the Cisco Catalyst 9000 switches

Catalyst 9400 Switch

The fan tray design on the Catalyst 9400 switch

Historically, front accessibility of all FRUable components has been an ante requirement for enterprise modular platforms.

This is to accommodate for space constrained closet environments where the switch had to be placed flush against the wall. Front accessibility of the fan-tray came with the caveat that all the cables need to be routed to the opposite side of fan-tray to enable serviceability in case of a failure. Cable management gets tricky when you have to route 48 twisted pair Ethernet cables to the same side of the chassis and in many cases customers need special cable guides to make this work.

The Catalyst 9400 chassis introduces user-configurable dual serviceable fan-tray design to overcome this specific challenge. This innovative design allows users to service the same fan-tray from the front and rear of the chassis. Cable management compromises are no more.


On the topic of fans, these generate all the acoustic noise emitted by the switches.

In environments where the closets do not have acoustic isolation, the noise can be disruptive and this is exactly what we attempted to minimize on the Catalyst 9000 switches. Historically, sensors measure ambient temperature and dynamically modulate the speed of fans as a mechanism to reduce noise. The Catalyst 9000 switches takes this a step further by deploying sensors to measure the barometric pressure that allows the fans to run at reduced RPMs to minimize acoustic noise at lower altitudes. Furthermore, an intricate network of sensors continuously monitors the Catalyst 9400 platform’s thermal health and increases the speed of selective fans within the fan-tray when alerted, minimizing the overall system generated noise. The same closed loop mechanism is also used to get N+1 redundancy for fans within the fan-tray where neighboring fans can compensate for a failed fan by increasing their RPM.

Design choices on the Catalyst 9000 switches also aid day-today operations. Asset management enabled by RFID comes with added overhead of programming the RFID and tagging it to the component that requires tracking. Not anymore! Catalyst 9000 switches come with pre-programmed RFID tags with optional customizable fields making inventory management more convenient than ever before. While RFID tags are included at the switch level on the Catalyst 9300/9500; the Catalyst 9400 sports the RFID tag on all field replaceable units (FRU)-supervisors, line-cards, fan-trays and power supplies.

As a network operator, imagine sending a highly trained employee out ever time you had to touch a switch - be it to connect debug cables or service a failed FRU. The Catalyst 9000 series now includes blue beacons on all switches and FRUs. Anyone with access to the switch can do trivial tasks like replacing a failed power supply. The savings for remote sites maintenance can be significant – just pick up the phone and you can literally ask anyone to service the switch.

Reference from https://communities.cisco.com/community/technology/enterprise_networks/enterprise_switching/blog/2017/06

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