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M40 Internet Backbone Router
本文介绍的是10余年前风靡一时的知名网络产品,有的昙花一现,红极一时,有的成为那个时代的经典设备,成为诸多网络技术爱好者的追捧对象,2012年了,介绍给大家了解一下,了解一下网络设备发展的历史
The M40? Internet backbone router is designed specifically for the needs of high-growth service providers. It features wire-rate forwarding performance, rich packet processing, reliable services delivery, unparalleled port density and flexibility, and best-in-class JUNOS? Internet software. The M40 router delivers the bandwidth required to cost-efficiently grow networks to OC-48c/STM-16 speeds, while also offering powerful tools, such as packet filtering, sampling, and MPLS traffic engineering, to ensure greater control during massive growth.
The M40 router offers wire-rate global connectivity and reliable service delivery while supporting rich packet processing, such as filtering and sampling.
The M40 router puts you ahead of the technology curve to meet both today’s and tomorrow’s service provider requirements.
Advantages
Features |
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Benefits |
Architecture |
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Highly integrated ASIC forwarding |
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Routing and forwarding performance cleanly separated |
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Single-stage buffering |
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Features are implemented in ASICs |
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Field replaceable Flexible PIC Concentrators and power supplies |
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JUNOS Internet software already deployed in the largest and fastest growing networks |
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Interfaces |
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Market-leading port density |
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Flexibly deployed in multiple environments, including core, peering, high-speed access, and hosting. |
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Environment |
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Maximum chassis power of 35 A @ 48 V |
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Services |
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Flexible and comprehensive support packages |
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Professional consulting |
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Product and technology training |
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"The unparalleled wire-speed performance of the M40 router and JUNOS software provide the support necessary to achieve rapid growth. Juniper Networks plays a critical role in positioning us as a premier provider of global IP services."
—Randy Catoe,
Vice President of Internet Engineering Operations, Solutions, and Support,
Cable and Wireless plc
Architecture |
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The two key components of the M40 architecture are the Packet Forwarding Engine (PFE) and the Routing Engine, which are connected via a 100-Mbps link. Control traffic passing through the 100-Mbps link is prioritized and rate limited to help protect against denial-of-service attacks.
The architecture ensures industry-leading service delivery by cleanly separating the forwarding performance from the routing performance. This separation ensures that stress experienced by one component does not adversely affect the performance of the other since there is no overlap of required resources.
Logical View of M40 Architecture
Leading-edge ASICs
The feature-rich M40 ASICs deliver a comprehensive hardware-based system for packet processing, including route lookups, filtering, sampling, rate limiting, load balancing, buffer management, switching, encapsulation, and de-encapsulation functions. To ensure a non-blocking forwarding path, all channels between the ASICs are oversized, dedicated paths.
Internet Processor II ASIC
The Internet Processor II? ASIC supports a lookup rate of over 40 Mpps. With over one million gates, the Internet Processor II ASIC delivers high-speed forwarding performance with advanced services, such as filtering and sampling, enabled. It is the largest, fastest, and most advanced ASIC ever implemented on a router platform and deployed in the Internet.
Distributed Buffer Manager ASICs
The Distributed Buffer Manager ASICs allocate incoming data packets throughout shared memory on the FPCs. This single-stage buffering improves performance by requiring only one write to and one read from shared memory. There are no extraneous steps of copying packets from input buffers to output buffers. The shared memory is completely nonblocking, which in turn, prevents head-of-line blocking.
I/O Manager ASICs
Each FPC is equipped with an I/O Manager ASIC that supports wire-rate packet parsing, packet prioritizing, and queuing. This ASIC divides the packets, stores them in shared memory (managed by the Distributed Buffer Manager ASICs), and re-assembles the packets for transmission.
Media-specific ASICs
The media-specific ASICs perform physical layer functions, such as framing. Each PIC is equipped with an ASIC or FPGA that performs control functions tailored to the PIC's media type.
Packet Forwarding Engine
The PFE provides Layer 2 and Layer 3 packet switching, route lookups, and packet forwarding. The Internet Processor II ASIC forwards up to 40 Mpps for all packet sizes. The aggregate throughput is 51.2 Gbps half duplex.
The PFE supports the same ASIC-based features supported by other M-series routers. For example, class-of-service features include rate limiting, classification, priority queuing, Random Early Detection, and Weighted Round Robin to increase bandwidth efficiency. Filtering and sampling are also available for restricting access, increasing security, and analyzing network traffic.
Finally, the PFE delivers maximum stability during exceptional conditions, while also providing a significantly lower part count. This stability reduces power consumption and increases mean time between failure.
Flexible PIC Concentrators
The FPCs house PICs and connect them to the rest of the PFE. There is a dedicated, full-duplex, 3.2-Gbps channel between each FPC and the core of the PFE.
You can insert up to eight FPCs in an M40 chassis. The OC-48c/STM-16 PIC occupies an entire FPC. Otherwise, each FPC supports up to four PICs in any combination, providing unparalleled interface density and configuration flexibility.
Each FPC contains shared memory for storing data packets received; the Distributed Buffer Manager ASICs on the SCB manage this memory. In addition, the FPC houses the I/O Manager ASIC, which performs a variety of queue management and class-of-service functions.
Physical Interface Cards
PICs provide a complete range of fiber optic and electrical transmission interfaces to the network. The M40 router offers flexibility and conserves rack space by supporting a wide variety of PICs and port densities. All PICs occupy one of four PIC spaces per FPC except for the OC-48c/STM-16 PIC, which occupies an entire FPC slot.
An additional Tunnel Services PIC enables the M40 router to function as the ingress or egress point of an IP-IP unicast tunnel, a Cisco generic routing encapsulation (GRE) tunnel, or a Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM) tunnel.
System Control Board
Hosting the Internet Processor II ASIC, the SCB performs sampling, filtering, and packet forwarding decisions. The SCB also houses a processor that processes exception and control packets, monitors system components, and controls FPC resets.
Routing Engine
The Routing Engine 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.
JUNOS Internet Software
JUNOS software is optimized to scale to large numbers of network interfaces and routes. The software consists of a series of system processes running in protected memory on top of an independent operating system. The modular design improves reliability by protecting against system-wide failure and by preventing the failure of one process from affecting the other software processes.
M40 Router Front View
M40 Router Back View
Specifications
Specification |
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Physical |
Height 35 in / 88.9 cm
Width 19 in / 48.26 cm
Depth 23.5 in / 59.69 cm
Weight Maximum configuration 280 lbs / 127 kg
Mounting Front or center rack mount
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FPC |
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SCB |
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Routing Engine |
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Power Requirements |
DC Maximum power 1,600 watts
Maximum current 35 A at 48 V
Input voltage -42 to -75 VDC operating range
AC Maximum power 1,664 watts
Maximum current 8 A at 208 V
Input voltage 180 to 264 VAC operating range
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Environmental |
Temperature 32 to 104 degrees F / 0 to 40 degrees C
Maximum No performance degradation to 10,000 ft / 3,048 m
Relative Humidity 5 to 90 percent noncondensing
Seismic / Tested to meet Bellcore Zone 4 earthquake requirements
Thermal Output 3,850 BTU/hour
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Agency Approvals |
Safety
EMC
Immunity
NEBS
ETSI
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Ordering Information
Model Number |
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Description |
Router |
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M40-B-DC |
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M40 base unit: 8-slot chassis with cooling system, backplane, Routing Engine (256-MB DRAM, 80-MB flash drive, 6.4-GB hard drive, 120-MB LS-120 drive), two DC power supplies, complete documentation (CD ROM). |
M40-B-AC |
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M40 base unit: 8-slot chassis with cooling system, backplane, Routing Engine (256-MB DRAM, 80-MB flash drive, 6.4-GB hard drive, 120-MB LS-120 drive), two AC power supplies (AC power cables are country specific and sold separately), complete documentation (CD ROM). |
Components |
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SCB-E-M40 |
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Enhanced System Control Board with Internet Processor II ASIC |
FPC |
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FPC |
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Flexible PIC Concentrator |
Power Cables |
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CBL-M40-PWR-AU10 |
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M40 AC power cable, Australia (10A, 8.2 ft / 2.5m) |
CBL-M40-PWR-AU |
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M40 AC power cable, Australia and New Zealand (15A, 8.2 ft / 2.5m) |
CBL-M40-PWR-EU |
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M40 AC power cable, Europe (16A, 8.2 ft / 2.5 m) |
CBL-M40-PWR-IT |
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M40 AC power cable, Italy (16A, 8.2 ft / 2.5 m) |
CBL-M40-PWR-UK |
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M40 AC power cable, UK (13A, 8.2 ft / 2.5 m) |
CBL-M40-PWR-US20 |
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M40 AC power cable, US, Canada, and Japan (20A, 8.2 ft / 2.5 m) |
Software |
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JUNOS |
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JUNOS Internet software (flash PC card) for USA and Canada (not for export) |
JUNOS-WW |
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JUNOS Internet software (flash PC card) for all countries except the USA and Canada (satisfies USA government requirements for the export of encryption technology) |
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