3com 5500G-EI Manual De Usuario

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Switch 5500 Family — Front View
17
You can disable auto-negotiation. You can manually configure these 
ports to 10 Mbps half duplex, 100 Mbps half duplex, 
 
10 Mbps full duplex, or 100 Mbps full duplex. It is not possible to 
manually configure a 1000 Mbps link because auto-negotiation is 
mandatory in the 1000 Mbps standard. If you disable auto-negotiation, 
Auto MDIX cannot function and the ports become fixed in MDIX 
(cross-over) mode.
If you disable auto-negotiation on a 1000 Mbps port, the speed drops to 
the highest available speed, which is 100 Mbps by default. 
1000BASE-X SFP Ports
The 1000BASE-X SFP (Small Form Factor Pluggable) ports support fiber 
Gigabit Ethernet short-wave (SX), long-wave (LX), long-haul (LH70), and 
copper (T) SFP Transceivers in any combination. This offers you the 
flexibility of using SFP transceivers to provide connectivity between the 
Switch and remote 1000 Mbps workgroups, or to create a high capacity 
aggregated link backbone connection.
The default state for these ports is auto-negotiation enabled, where the 
speed, duplex and flow control modes are negotiated. As the speed and 
duplex modes are fixed by the media type, only the flow control is 
negotiated with the link partner. Alternatively, auto-negotiation can be 
disabled (except 1000BASE-T where auto-negotiation is mandatory) and 
the flow control setting can be manually configured.
You can also use these ports for stacking the 5500 SI and EI. For 
information about stacking these switches, see the section entitled 
“Guidelines For Interconnecting Units” on page 78.
100BASE-X SFP Ports 
(Switch 5500-EI FX 
only)
The Switch 5500-EI FX has 24 100BASE-X SFP ports. These are 100Mbps 
ports that can use multi-mode fiber optic cables of up to 2km and 
single-mode fiber optic cables of up to 10km.
You must manually configure duplex and flow control. 
The Switch 5500-EI FX supports copper transceivers on the Gigabit SFP 
ports only.
Console Port 
The console port allows you to connect a terminal and perform remote or 
local out-of-band management. As the console port on the Switch is an 
RJ-45 port, you must connect an RJ-450 to DB9 converter cable to a 
standard null modem cable in order to connect a terminal.
10014925-AD_S5500_GSG.book  Page 17  Thursday, August 16, 2007  12:29 PM