Q-Logic 2-8C Manuel D’Utilisation

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2 – General Description
Fibre Channel Ports
2-6
59042-06 A
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2.2.2
Small Form-Factor Pluggable (SFP) Transceivers
An SFP transceiver, like the one shown in 
, converts electrical signals to 
and from optical laser signals to transmit and receive. SFP transceivers plug into 
the ports; duplex fiber optic cables plug into the transceivers which then connect 
to the devices. A port is capable of transmitting at 1-Gbps or 2-Gbps; however, the 
transceiver must be capable of 2-Gbps for the port to deliver at that rate.
The SFP transceivers are hot pluggable. This means that you can remove or 
install an SFP transceiver while the switch is operating without harming the switch 
or the transceiver. However, communication with the connected device will be 
interrupted. Refer to 
 for information about 
installing and removing SFP optical transceivers.
Figure 2-6.  SFP Transceiver
2.2.3
Port Types
SANbox2-8c switches support generic ports (G_Port, GL_Port), fabric ports 
(F_Port, FL_Port), and expansion ports (E_Port). Switches come from the factory 
with all ports configured as GL_Ports. Generic, fabric, and expansion ports 
function as follows:
„
A GL_Port self-configures as an FL_Port when connected to a public loop 
device, as an F_Port when connected to a single public device, or as an 
E_Port when connected to another FC-SW-2 compliant switch.
„
A G_Port self-configures as an F_Port when connected to a single public 
device, or as an E_Port when connected to another FC-SW-2 compliant 
switch.
„
An FL_Port supports a loop of up to 126 public devices. An FL_Port can also 
configure itself during the fabric login process as an F_Port when connected 
to a single public device (N_Port).
„
An F_Port supports a single public device. If the device is a single device on 
a loop, the GL_Port will attempt to configure first as an F_Port, then if that 
fails, as an FL_Port.