MS250-24P Port Oversubscription/ASIC design

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Unsuited0873
Conversationalist

MS250-24P Port Oversubscription/ASIC design

Hi,

 

Does anybody know how the Gigabit ports on the MS250-24P are connected to the ASICs, and how many ports share the same amount of switching capacity? I have 10 APs I want to connect to the switch in the best way to share the switching capability of the switch. I'm guessing that just plugging the 10 APs into Ports 1 to 10 doesn't result in the best performance, and there is a better way of distributing these across all of the 24 interfaces. There will be nothing else connecting to the Gigabit ports. All four SFP+ interfaces (25-28) will be used to connect to the core switch, in case the use of the SFP+ ports also affect the Gigabit oversubscription.

 

Thanks.

1 Accepted Solution
JosRus
Meraki Employee
Meraki Employee

Hi @Unsuited0873!  

 

The KB article states that model has a switching capacity of 128 Gbps, with a separate stacking bandwidth stated of 80 Gbps. 

 

At line rate, that should be 1Gbps up and down on each RJ45 port plus 10Gbps up/down on each SFP+ port, as:
24 ports x 2 Gbps (up/down) plus 4 ports x 20 Gbps (up/down) = 128 Gbps. 

The math is true for the 48 port models too, as a max capacity of 176 Gbps is (48 x 2) + (4 x 20). 

 

With this in mind, you should not need to be concerned about ASIC-level distribution as the switching capacity indicates the maximum line rate is achievable across all ports.

If you found this post helpful, please give it kudos. If my answer solved your problem, click "accept as solution" so that others can benefit from it.

View solution in original post

2 Replies 2
JosRus
Meraki Employee
Meraki Employee

Hi @Unsuited0873!  

 

The KB article states that model has a switching capacity of 128 Gbps, with a separate stacking bandwidth stated of 80 Gbps. 

 

At line rate, that should be 1Gbps up and down on each RJ45 port plus 10Gbps up/down on each SFP+ port, as:
24 ports x 2 Gbps (up/down) plus 4 ports x 20 Gbps (up/down) = 128 Gbps. 

The math is true for the 48 port models too, as a max capacity of 176 Gbps is (48 x 2) + (4 x 20). 

 

With this in mind, you should not need to be concerned about ASIC-level distribution as the switching capacity indicates the maximum line rate is achievable across all ports.

If you found this post helpful, please give it kudos. If my answer solved your problem, click "accept as solution" so that others can benefit from it.
Unsuited0873
Conversationalist

Thank you for the reply.

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