meta data for this page
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
| Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
| network:switches:cisco [2024/06/20 08:56] – niziak | network:switches:cisco [2024/06/24 12:17] (current) – niziak | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
| Suffixes: | Suffixes: | ||
| * '' | * '' | ||
| - | | + | * '' |
| + | * '' | ||
| + | * basic L3 | ||
| + | * '' | ||
| + | * L2 only | ||
| + | * + ACL | ||
| + | * + QOS | ||
| + | * 128 --> 256 VLANs | ||
| + | | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Stable IOS ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | For legacy switches: | ||
| + | * 15.2(4)E10 | ||
| + | * 15.0(2)SE12 | ||
| + | * 12.2(55)SE13 | ||
| ===== 3750 vs 3560 ===== | ===== 3750 vs 3560 ===== | ||
| + | * 3560's and 3750 are eventually the same switches.The only difference is that 3750's switches are based on stacking capabilties. They have a High-Speed stacking bus to give stacking capabilties. | ||
| + | * Switching capacity (ignoring stack ring) is the same | ||
| + | * 3750X can be stacked | ||
| + | * the 3750X can also share power across stack member | ||