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Troubleshooting JUNOS Platforms

 

 

 

Reproduction

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SRX5600 Major Com onents

 

 

The slide s nts a pictorial view of the SRX5600 and its major components.

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JUNOS Platform Details • A–61

Troubleshooting JUNOS Platforms

 

 

 

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SRX Major Compon nts

 

 

The slide presents a pictorial vi w of the SRX3600 and its major components.

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A–62 • JUNOS Platform Details

Troubleshooting JUNOS Platforms

 

SRX3400 Front Vi w

 

The slide s nts a pictorial view of the SRX3400 and its major components from the

 

front. Reproduction

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JUNOS Platform Details • A–63

Troubleshooting JUNOS Platforms

 

 

 

Reproduction

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SRX3400 Rear Vi w

 

 

The slide presents a pictorial vi w of the SRX3400 and its major components from the

 

 

rear.

 

 

 

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A–64 • JUNOS Platform Details

Troubleshooting JUNOS Platforms

 

 

 

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SRX210 Major Com on nts

 

 

The slide s nts a pictorial view of the SRX210 and its major components.

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JUNOS Platform Details • A–65

Troubleshooting JUNOS Platforms

 

 

 

Reproduction

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

End-of-Life Products

 

 

The slide highlights the topic we discuss next.

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A–66 • JUNOS Platform Details

Troubleshooting JUNOS Platforms

 

 

 

Reproduction

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

End-of-Life Products

 

 

The following slid s are from earlier versions of this course. We include them for the

 

 

benefit of custom rs with older products.

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JUNOS Platform Details • A–67

Troubleshooting JUNOS Platforms

 

 

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M5 and M10 Ov rvi w

 

 

 

 

 

 

The M5 and M10 rout rs

liv

r high performance and highly-flexible interfaces in a

 

 

space-efficient and pow r-

ffici

nt d sign. These routers use the same architecture,

 

 

ASICs, and JUNOS Software as the already proven M Series routers. This

 

 

for

 

 

 

 

 

 

Inte net-tested co e technology is now available at your network edge, along with

 

 

value-added se vices, such as packet filtering and sampling.

 

 

The ve sized fo warding performance of the Internet Processor II ASIC provides

 

 

wire-speed wa ding with plenty of headroom. In fact, the M5 and M10 routers

 

 

rward packets at an aggregate throughput rate of 6.4 Gbps and 12.8 Gbps,

 

 

respectively.

 

 

 

 

Not

 

 

 

 

The M5 and M10 are ideal for edge applications involving the aggregation of dedicated access circuits. They are also ideal for core applications in locations where space and power are at a premium, such as smaller metro points of presence. The ability to connect a wide range of high-performance interfaces from T1 and E1 through OC12c (STM4) ensures that you can scale the network easily and cost efficiently.

A–68 • JUNOS Platform Details

M5

The

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Troubleshooting JUNOS Platforms

Reproductionload-balanced.

 

 

 

and M10 Hardware Com onents

hardware compon nts for the M5 and M10 are the following:

Sheet metal chassis.

Two power supplies (AC or DC): The maximum chassis power is 340 watts

 

for the M5 and 434 watts for the M10. Power supplies can be either AC

 

or DC (but not both simultaneously); when two are present, power is

Fan assembly.

Routing Engine: The RE maintains the routing tables and controls the

 

routing protocols, as well as the JUNOS Software processes that control

 

the router's interfaces, the chassis components, system management,

 

and user access to the router. These routing and software processes run

 

on top of a kernel that interacts with the PFE.

Forwarding Engine Board: The PFE provides Layer 2 and Layer 3 packet

 

switching, route lookups, and packet forwarding. The Internet Processor II

 

ASIC forwards up to 40 Mbps for all packet sizes. The throughput is

 

5+ Gbps in an M5 and 10+ Gbps in an M10. The PFE supports the same

 

ASIC-based features supported by all other M Series routers, including

 

filtering and sampling for restricting access, increasing security, and

 

analyzing network traffic.

Four (M5) or eight (M10) PICs.

JUNOS Platform Details • A–69

Troubleshooting JUNOS Platforms

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M5 and M10 Craft Int rface

The M5 and M10 Craft Int rface supports PIC online and offline buttons, alarm LEDs, an alarm cutoff and lamp st button, and the ports used to connect to the routing engine. Ensure that you take PICs offline before removing them from the chassis using

the PIC online and offline buttons located below each respective PIC. After inserting a

PIC into the chassis, press and hold the online and offline button to activate power to

that PIC.

Reproduction

 

Y u can achieve access to the local RE using any of the following:

Ethernet management port: Connects the RE to an out-of-band

 

management network.

Console port: Connects a system console to the RE with EIA/TIA-232

 

serial asynchronous cable. Use the system console to access the CLI to

for

 

configure the attached router. This port is active by default.

Auxiliary port: Connects a laptop or modem to the RE with EIA/TIA-232

 

serial asynchronous cable. You can also use this port to access the CLI.

This port is disabled by default and you must activate it with a set system ports auxiliary type terminal-type command.

Note that you must remove power to the chassis before removing or installing the FEB. You can swap the RE with power still applied, but doing so results in a system reboot.

A–70 • JUNOS Platform Details