Easy to manage, Cisco stackable switches can pile up the savings
Fast-growing networks have made stackable switches a necessity, and now Cisco Systems Inc. has come up with an inexpensive way to stack them.
By Michael Cheek and John Breeden II
GCN Staff

Fast-growing networks have made stackable switches a necessity, and now Cisco Systems Inc. has come up with an inexpensive way to stack them.
The company's Catalyst 3500XL family of 10/100-Mbps switches can use Cisco's own copper gigabit interface converter (GBIC) between 12- or 24-port units at about half the price of industry-standard fiber converters.
![]() | Cisco's GigaStack GBIC handled small packets faster and large packets slower than an industry-standard fiber GBIC. |
Box Score'''''''''''''' | ![]() |
Catalyst 3500XL with GigaStack 12- or 24-port 10/100-Mbps stackable switch with gigabit interface converters Cisco Systems Inc.; San Jose, Calif.; tel. 800-553-6387 www.cisco.com Price: Catalyst 3524XL $3,995 and Catalyst 3512 $2,995, both less $250 rebate; GigaStack GBIC with half-meter cable $250 + GigaStack's cheaper than fiber GBIC and performs slightly better + Easy stack manageability via single-IP-address Web console + Excellent standalone performance |
The switch is on
| How the GCN Lab tested |
' The lab used a SmartBits 2000 test unit to measure the Layer 2 communications performance of Cisco Catalyst switches. ' All switches and SmartBits unit ports were set to 100 Mbps and full duplex. ' The lab configured SmartBits 2000's Version 6.60 firmware with 24 ML-7710 cards, which use RJ-45 plugs. Standard 2-foot Category 5 cable connected the SmartBits unit to the switches. ' Netcom Systems' SmartApplications 2.22 software controlled the SmartBits 2000 unit during the tests. ' The test covered seven Ethernet User Datagram Protocol packet sizes: 64, 128, 256, 512, 1,024, 1,280 and 1,518 bytes. The UDP packet type is specified by the Network Working Group's Request for Comments 1242, the standards document for measuring performance of Ethernet and Fast Ethernet devices. ' All tests ran for 60 seconds in three configurations: standalone, 10-to-10 port and 12-to-12 port. ' The standalone configuration examined the performance of the 24-port Catalyst 3524XL switch. ' The 10-to-10 tests used the same Catalyst 3524 plus the 12-port Catalyst 3512XL. Using either GigaStack or fiber GBICs, the lab sent signals from the 3524 to the 3512. Only 10 ports were in use because the theoretical limit of the 100-Mbps ports would fill the gigabit bandwidth to 100 percent. ' The 12-to-12 configuration was similar, except that the lab staff deliberately overloaded the GBICs with two additional 100-Mbps data streams. |
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