x230 Series: Enterprise Gigabit Edge Switches

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Switches | Product Information

x230 Series
Enterprise Gigabit Edge Switches
The Allied Telesis x230 Series of Layer 3 Gigabit switches offer
an impressive set of features in a compact design, making them
ideal for applications at the network edge.

Overview Network protection


Allied Telesis x230 Series switches Advanced storm protection features
provide an excellent access solution include bandwidth limiting, policy- AMF secure mode increases network
for today’s networks, supporting based storm protection and packet security with management traffic
Gigabit to the desktop for maximum storm protection. encryption, authorization, and
performance. The Power over Ethernet monitoring.
Plus (PoE+) models provide an ideal Network storms are often caused by
solution for connecting and remotely cabling errors that result in a network ECO friendly
powering wireless access points, IP loop. Allied Telesis x230 Series switches The x230 Series supports Energy
video surveillance cameras, and IP provide features to detect loops as soon Efficient Ethernet, which automatically
phones. With 8, 16 or 24 Gigabit ports, as they are created. Loop detection and reduces the power consumed by
SFP uplinks, and fanless models thrash limiting take immediate action to the switch whenever
for silent operation, the x230 Series prevent network storms. there is no traffic on a
enable flexible deployment and secure port. This sophisticated
connectivity at the network edge. Manageable feature can significantly reduce your
The x230 runs the advanced operating costs by reducing the power
Secure AlliedWare Plus™ fully featured requirements of the switch and any
Network security is guaranteed, with operating system, delivering a rich associated cooling equipment.
powerful control over network traffic feature set and an industry-standard
types, secure management options, Command Line Interface (CLI). This The x230-10GT and x230L models
and other multi-layered security reduces training requirements and are fanless, providing silent operation,
features built right in. is consistent across all AlliedWare which makes them ideal for desktop or
Plus devices, simplifying network work area deployment.
Network Access Control (NAC) management.
gives unprecedented control over
user access to the network, in The web-based Graphical User
order to mitigate threats to network Interface (GUI) is an easy-to-use and
infrastructure. powerful management tool, with
comprehensive monitoring facilities.
Allied Telesis x230 switches use ‫ ۼۼ‬AMF secure mode
802.1x port-based authentication, in Future-proof
partnership with standards-compliant x230 Series switches are Software ‫ ۼۼ‬VLAN ACLs
dynamic VLAN assignment, to assess Defined Networking (SDN) ready and
a user’s adherence to network security ‫ۼۼ‬TACACS+ Command Authorization
able to support OpenFlow v1.3.
policies and either grant access or ‫ ۼۼ‬Active Fiber Monitoring
offer remediation. Tri-authentication Powerful network management
ensures the network is only accessed Meeting the increased management ‫ ۼۼ‬OpenFlow for SDN
by known users and devices. Secure requirements of modern converged
access is also available for guests. ‫ ۼۼ‬VLAN Mirroring (RSPAN)
networks, Allied Telesis Autonomous
Management Framework (AMF) ‫ ۼۼ‬Precision Time Protocol (PTP)
Security from malicious network automates many everyday tasks
attacks is provided by a Transparent Mode
including configuration management.
comprehensive range of features such The complete network can be ‫ ۼۼ‬Fanless models provide silent
as DHCP snooping, STP root guard, managed as a single virtual device operation
BPDU protection and access control with powerful centralized management
lists. Each of these can be configured features. Growing the network can ‫ ۼۼ‬G.8032 Ethernet Ring Protection
to perform a variety of actions upon be accomplished with plug-and-play
detection of a suspected attack. simplicity, and network node recovery
is fully zero-touch.

alliedtelesis.com 617-000519 RevZO NETWORK SMARTER


x230 Series | Enterprise Gigabit Edge Switches

‫ۼۼ‬
Key Features

Allied Telesis Autonomous Storm protection UniDirectional Link Detection


Management FrameworkTM (AMF) Advanced packet storm control features protect the ‫ ۼۼ‬UniDirectional Link Detection (UDLD) is useful
‫ ۼۼ‬Allied Telesis Autonomous Management network from broadcast storms: for monitoring fiber-optic links between two
Framework (AMF) is a sophisticated suite of ‫ ۼۼ‬Bandwidth limiting minimizes the effects of the switches that use two single-direction fibers to
management tools that provide a simplified storm by reducing the amount of flooding traffic. transmit and receive packets. UDLD prevents
approach to network management. Common traffic from being sent across a bad link by
tasks are automated or made so simple that ‫ ۼۼ‬Policy-based storm protection is more powerful blocking the ports at both ends of the link in the
the every-day running of a network can be than bandwidth limiting. It restricts storm damage event that either the individual transmitter or
achieved without the need for highly-trained, and to within the storming VLAN, and it provides the receiver for that connection fails.
expensive, network engineers. Powerful features flexibility to define the traffic rate that creates a
like centralized management, auto-backup, auto- broadcast storm. The action the device should
take when it detects a storm can be configured, Optical DDM
upgrade, auto-provisioning and auto-recovery
such as disabling the port from the VLAN or ‫ ۼۼ‬Most modern optical SFP/SFP+/XFP
enable plug-and-play networking and
shutting the port down. transceivers support Digital Diagnostics
zero-touch management.
Monitoring (DDM) functions according to the
‫ ۼۼ‬AMF secure mode encrypts all AMF traffic, ‫ ۼۼ‬Packet storm protection allows limits to be set on
specification SFF-8472. This enables real
provides unit and user authorization, and the broadcast reception rate, multicast frames and
time monitoring of the various parameters of
monitors network access to greatly enhance destination lookup failures. In addition, separate
the transceiver, such as optical output power,
network security. limits can be set to specify when the device will
temperature, laser bias current and transceiver
discard each of the different packet types.
supply voltage. Easy access to this information
Power over Ethernet Plus (PoE+) simplifies diagnosing problems with optical
Loop protection modules and fiber connections.
‫ ۼۼ‬With PoE, a separate power connection to media
endpoints such as IP phones and wireless access ‫ۼۼ‬Thrash limiting, also known as Rapid MAC
points is not necessary. PoE+ reduces costs movement, detects and resolves network loops. Active Fiber Monitoring
It is highly user-configurable — from the rate
and provides even greater flexibility, providing
of looping traffic to the type of action the switch
‫ ۼۼ‬Active Fiber Monitoring prevents eavesdropping
the capability to connect devices requiring more on fiber communications by monitoring received
power (up to 30 Watts) such as tilt and zoom should take when it detects a loop.
optical power. If an intrusion is detected, the
security cameras. ‫ ۼۼ‬With thrash limiting, the switch only detects a link can be automatically shut down, or an
loop when a storm has occurred, which can operator alert can be sent.
Ethernet Protection Switched Ring potentially cause disruption to the network. To
(EPSRingTM) avoid this, loop detection works in conjunction
VLAN Mirroring (RSPAN)
with thrash limiting to send special packets, called
‫ ۼۼ‬EPSRing allows several x230 switches to join Loop Detection Frames (LDF), that the switch ‫ ۼۼ‬VLAN mirroring allows traffic from a port on
a protected ring capable of recovery within as listens for. If a port receives an LDF packet, one a remote switch to be analysed locally. Traffic
little as 50ms. This feature is perfect for high can choose to disable the port, disable the link, or being transmitted or received on the port is
availability in enterprise networks. send an SNMP trap. duplicated and sent across the network on a
special VLAN.
G.8032 Ethernet Ring Protection Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) Root
‫ ۼۼ‬G.8032 provides standards-based high-speed Guard Find Me
ring protection, that can be deployed stand-alone,
‫ ۼۼ‬STP root guard designates which devices can ‫ ۼۼ‬In busy server rooms comprised of a large
or interoperate with Allied Telesis EPSR. number of equipment racks, it can be quite a
assume the root bridge role in an STP network.
‫ ۼۼ‬Ethernet Connectivity Fault Monitoring (CFM) This stops an undesirable device from taking job finding the correct switch quickly among
proactively monitors links and VLANs, and over this role, where it could either compromise many similar units. The “Find Me” feature
provides alerts when a fault is detected. network performance or cause a security is a simple visual way to quickly identify the
weakness. desired physical switch for maintenance or
other purposes, by causing its LEDs to flash in
Access Control Lists (ACLs)
a specified pattern.
‫ۼۼ‬The x230 Series features industry-standard Bridge Protocol Data Unit (BPDU)
access control functionality through ACLs. ACLs protection
IPv6 Support
filter network traffic to control whether packets ‫ ۼۼ‬BPDU protection adds extra security to STP. It
are forwarded or blocked at the port interface. protects the spanning tree configuration by
‫ ۼۼ‬With the depletion of IPv4 address space, IPv6
This provides a powerful network security is rapidly becoming a mandatory requirement for
preventing malicious DoS attacks caused by
mechanism to select the types of traffic to be many government and enterprise customers. To
spoofed BPDUs. If a BPDU packet is received on
analyzed, forwarded, or influenced in some way. meet this need, now and into the future, the x230
a protected port, the BPDU protection feature
An example of this would be to provide traffic Series supports IPv6 forwarding in hardware
disables the port and alerts the network manager.
flow control. and features MLD snooping for efficient use of
network bandwidth.
Tri-authentication
VLAN ACLs ‫ ۼۼ‬Authentication options on the x230 Series
‫ ۼۼ‬Simplify access and traffic control across entire Precision Time Protocol (PTP)
include alternatives to 802.1x port-based
segments of the network. Access Control Lists authentication, such as web authentication, to
‫ ۼۼ‬PTP (IEEE 1588v2) sychronizes clocks
(ACLs) can be applied to a Virtual LAN (VLAN) as throughout the network with micro-second
enable guest access and MAC authentication for
well as a specific port. accuracy, supporting industrial automation and
end points that do not have an 802.1x supplicant.
control systems.
All three authentication methods—802.1x,
Easy To Manage MAC-based and Web-based—can be enabled
‫ۼۼ‬The AlliedWare Plus operating system simultaneously on the same port, resulting in Flexible deployment
incorporates an industry standard CLI, facilitating tri-authentication. ‫ ۼۼ‬The x230-10GT and x230L models are fanless
intuitive manageability. for silent operation. This enables switch
TACACS+ Command Authorization placement in work spaces and on desktops with
‫ ۼۼ‬With three distinct modes, the CLI is very secure, no interruption to network users.
and the use of SSHv2 encrypted and strongly ‫ ۼۼ‬Centralize control of which commands may
authenticated remote login sessions ensures CLI be issued by a specific user of an AlliedWare
access is not compromised. Plus device. TACACS+ command authorization
‫ ۼۼ‬As a Layer 2+ switch, a static route can be added complements authentication and accounting
to allow a user in a different subnet to manage services for a complete AAA solution.
the switch.

2 | x230 Series 617-000519 RevZO


x230 Series | Enterprise Gigabit Edge Switches

Key Solutions

Network convergence
The convergence of network services in the
Enterprise has led to increasing demand for
highly available networks with minimal downtime.
Diagram 1 shows x230 switches with high

x2
30
performance EPSR connectivity to the x930
VCStack core. This topology provides recovery in
as little as 50ms, if required.

x2
x2
30
30
Network flexibility
Flexible network deployment is facilitated by the
compact 10 and 18 port x230 PoE+ models,

x2
30
as shown in the Campus network in diagram
2. With the growth of wireless networking and

x9 x60
30 0-2
digital security, the x230 PoE+ models are ideal Servers

4
supplying connectivity and power at the network
edge, supporting the full 30 watts of PoE+. The
fanless x230L models provide silent operation to
enable deployment in work areas.
Diagram 1
AMF provides an easy yet powerful solution
for managing multiple devices with
plug-and-play simplicity.
x2
30

x5 x60
10 0-2
4

x2
30
x2
30

0L
xx22330L
x5 x60
10 0-2
4

x2
30

Network Attached
00LL
xx2233 Storage

Campus
Data Center

0
SB

x5110
x8
11

x5
2

Server
Rack
Ro

Master
ut
er

10 Gigabit link
Internet
1 Gigabit link
Link aggregation
Diagram 2

NETWORK SMARTER 617-000519 RevZO x230 Series | 3


x230 Series | Enterprise Gigabit Edge Switches

Product Specifications
10/100/1000T (RJ-45) POE+ ENABLE
PRODUCT 100/1000X SFP PORTS TOTAL PORTS SWITCHING FABRIC FORWARDING RATE
COPPER PORTS PORTS
x230-10GP 8 2 10 8 20Gbps 14.9Mpps
x230-10GT 8 2 10 - 20Gbps 14.9Mpps
x230-18GP 16 2 18 16 36Gbps 26.8Mpps
x230-18GT 16 2 18 - 36Gbps 26.8Mpps
x230-28GP 24 4 28 24 56Gbps 41.7Mpps
x230-28GT 24 4 28 - 56Gbps 41.7Mpps
x230L-17GT 16 1 17 - 34Gbps 25.3Mpps
x230L-26GT 24 2 26 - 52Gbps 38.7Mpps

Physical specifications Latency (microseconds)


PRODUCT WIDTH X DEPTH X HEIGHT WEIGHT PACKAGED DIMENSIONS WEIGHT PORT SPEED
PRODUCT
210 x 275 x 42.5 mm 2.1 kg (4.6 lb) 43 x 36 x 15 cm 3.45 kg (7.6 lb) 10MBPS 100MBPS 1GBPS
x230-10GP
(8.27 x 10.83 x 1.67 in) (16.93 x 14.17 x 5.90 in)
x230-10GP/GT 55µs 7.8µs 3.4µs
x230-10GT 265 x 180 x 42.5 mm 1.5 kg (3.3 lb) 43 x 36 x 15 cm 2.85 kg (6.3 lb)
(10.43 x 7.08 x 1.67 in) (16.93 x 14.17 x 5.90 in) x230-18GP/GT 56µs 7.9µs 3.4µs

341 x 231 x 44 mm 3.0 kg (6.6 lb) 43 x 36 x 15 cm 4.35 kg (9.6 lb) x230-28GP/GT 59µs 8.6µs 4.3µs
x230-18GP
(13.42 x 9.09 x 1.73 in) (16.93 x 14.17 x 5.90 in)
x230L-17GT 56µs 7.9µs 3.4µs
x230-18GT 341 x 231 x 44 mm 2.4 kg (5.3 lb) 43 x 36 x 15 cm 4.0 kg (8.8 lb)
(13.42 x 9.09 x 1.73 in) (16.93 x 14.17 x 5.90 in) x230L-26GT 59µs 8.6µs 4.3µs

x230-28GP 440 x 290 x 44 mm 4.7 kg (10.4 lb) 53 x 43 x 15 cm 6.35 kg (14.0 lb)


(17.32 x 11.42 x 1.73 in) (20.86 x 16.93 x 5.90 in)
x230-28GT and 341 x 231 x 44 mm 2.4 kg (5.3 lb) 43 x 36 x 15 cm 4.0 kg (8.8 lb)
x230L-26GT (13.42 x 9.09 x 1.73 in) (16.93 x 14.17 x 5.90 in)

x230L-17GT 341 x 210 x 44 mm 43.5 x 40 x 14.5 cm 3.4 kg (7.5 lb)


2.2 kg (4.85 lb)
(13.42 x 8.27 x 1.73 in) (17.13 x 15.71 x 5.71 in)

Performance IP Features ‫ ۼۼ‬Limit bandwidth per port or per traffic class down
‫ ۼۼ‬Up to 16K MAC addresses ‫ ۼۼ‬IPv4 static routing and RIP to 64kbps
‫ ۼۼ‬Up to 512 multicast entries ‫ ۼۼ‬DHCPv6 client ‫ ۼۼ‬Wirespeed traffic classification with low latency
‫ ۼۼ‬256MB DDR SDRAM (GP models) essential for VoIP and real-time streaming media
‫ ۼۼ‬Device management over IPv6 networks with applications
‫ ۼۼ‬512MB DDR SDRAM (GT models) SNMPv6, Telnetv6, SSHv6 and Syslogv6
‫ ۼۼ‬Policy-based QoS based on VLAN, port, MAC and
‫ ۼۼ‬2048 configurable VLANs (GP models) ‫ ۼۼ‬NTPv6 client and server general packet classifiers
‫ۼۼ‬4094 configurable VLANs (GT models) ‫ ۼۼ‬Policy-based storm protection
Management
‫ ۼۼ‬64MB flash memory ‫ ۼۼ‬Allied Telesis Autonomous Management ‫ ۼۼ‬Extensive remarking capabilities
‫ ۼۼ‬Packet Buffer memory: 1.5MB Framework (AMF) enables powerful centralized ‫ۼۼ‬Taildrop for queue congestion control
‫ ۼۼ‬Supports 10KB jumbo frames management and zero-touch device installation
‫ ۼۼ‬Strict priority, weighted round robin or mixed
and recovery
‫ ۼۼ‬Wirespeed forwarding scheduling
‫ ۼۼ‬Console management port on the front panel for ‫ ۼۼ‬IP precedence and DiffServ marking based on layer
Reliability ease of access
2, 3 and 4 headers
‫ ۼۼ‬Modular AlliedWare Plus operating system ‫ ۼۼ‬Eco-friendly mode allows ports and LEDs to be
disabled to save power
‫ ۼۼ‬Full environmental monitoring of PSU internal Resiliency Features
temperature and internal voltages. SNMP traps ‫ ۼۼ‬Web-based Graphical User Interface (GUI) ‫ ۼۼ‬Control Plane Prioritization (CPP) ensures the
alert network managers in case of any failure ‫ ۼۼ‬Industry-standard CLI with context-sensitive help CPU always has sufficient bandwidth to process
network control traffic
‫ ۼۼ‬Powerful CLI scripting engine with built-in text editor
Flexibility and compatibility ‫ ۼۼ‬Dynamic link failover (host attach)
‫ ۼۼ‬SFP ports will support any combination of ‫ ۼۼ‬SD/SDHC memory card socket allows software
release files, configurations and other files to be ‫ ۼۼ‬EPSRing (Ethernet Protection Switched Rings) with
10/100/1000T, 100X, 100FX, 100BX, 1000X, enhanced recovery for extra resiliency
stored for backup and distribution to other devices
1000SX, 1000LX, 1000ZX or 1000ZX CWDM
SFPs ‫ ۼۼ‬Configurable logs and triggers provide an audit trail ‫ ۼۼ‬Loop protection: loop detection and thrash limiting
of SD card insertion and removal ‫ ۼۼ‬PVST+ compatibility mode
Diagnostic tools ‫ ۼۼ‬Comprehensive SNMP MIB support for standards- ‫ ۼۼ‬RRP snooping
‫ ۼۼ‬Active Fiber Monitoring detects tampering on based device management ‫ ۼۼ‬STP root guard
optical links ‫ ۼۼ‬Management stacking allows up to 24 devices to
‫ ۼۼ‬Built-In Self Test (BIST) be managed from a single console Security Features
‫ ۼۼ‬Find-me device locator ‫ ۼۼ‬Event-based triggers allow user-defined scripts to ‫ ۼۼ‬Access Control Lists (ACLs) based on layer 3 and 4
be executed upon selected system events headers, per VLAN or port
‫ ۼۼ‬Cable fault locator (TDR)
‫ ۼۼ‬Configurable ACLs for management traffic
‫ ۼۼ‬Optical Digital Diagnostics Monitoring (DDM) Quality of Service (QoS) ‫ ۼۼ‬Auth-fail and guest VLANs
‫ ۼۼ‬Automatic link flap detection and port shutdown ‫ ۼۼ‬8 priority queues with a hierarchy of high priority ‫ ۼۼ‬Authentication, Authorization and Accounting
‫ ۼۼ‬Ping polling for IPv4 and IPv6 queues for real time traffic, and mixed scheduling, (AAA)
for each switch port
‫ ۼۼ‬Port and VLAN mirroring (RSPAN)
‫ۼۼ‬TraceRoute for IPv4 and IPv6

4 | x230 Series 617-000519 RevZO


x230 Series | Enterprise Gigabit Edge Switches

‫ ۼۼ‬Bootloader can be password protected for device Environmental specifications Electrical approvals and compliances
security ‫ۼۼ‬Operating temperature range: ‫ ۼۼ‬EMC: EN55022 class A, FCC class A, VCCI class A
‫ ۼۼ‬BPDU protection 0°C to 50°C (32°F to 122°F) ‫ ۼۼ‬Immunity: EN55024, EN61000-3-levels 2
‫ ۼۼ‬DHCP snooping, IP source guard and Dynamic ARP 0°C to 40°C (32°F to 104°F) (x230L models) (Harmonics), and 3 (Flicker) – AC models only
Inspection (DAI)
Derated by 1°C per 305 meters (1,000 ft)
‫ ۼۼ‬Dynamic VLAN assignment ‫ ۼۼ‬Storage temperature range:
Safety
‫ ۼۼ‬MAC address filtering and MAC address lock-down ‫ ۼۼ‬Standards: UL60950-1, CAN/CSA-C22.2 No.
-20°C to 60°C (-4°F to 140°F) 60950-1-03, EN60950-1, EN60825-1, AS/NZS
‫ ۼۼ‬Network Access and Control (NAC) features ‫ ۼۼ‬Operating relative humidity range: 60950.1
manage endpoint security
0% to 90% non-condensing ‫ ۼۼ‬Certifications: UL, cUL, UL-EU
‫ ۼۼ‬Port-based learn limits (intrusion detection)
‫ ۼۼ‬Storage relative humidity range:
‫ ۼۼ‬Private VLANs provide security and port isolation Restrictions on Hazardous Substances
for multiple customers using the same VLAN 0% to 95% non-condensing (RoHS) Compliance
‫ ۼۼ‬Secure Copy (SCP) ‫ۼۼ‬Operating altitude: ‫ ۼۼ‬EU RoHS compliant
‫ ۼۼ‬Strong password security and encryption 2,000 meters maximum (6,562 ft) ‫ ۼۼ‬China RoHS compliant
‫ۼۼ‬Tri-authentication: MAC-based, web-based and
IEEE 802.1x
‫ ۼۼ‬RADIUS group selection per VLAN or port

Power characteristics: 100-240 VAC, 50-60Hz, 2.4A maximum

NO POE LOAD FULL POE+ LOAD MAX POE MAX POE+


MAX POE
PRODUCT PORTS AT 15W PORTS AT 30W
MAX POWER MAX HEAT MAX POWER MAX HEAT POWER
NOISE NOISE PER PORT PER PORT
CONSUMPTION DISSIPATION CONSUMPTION DISSIPATION
x230-10GP 16W 55 BTU/hr 33 dBA 180W 126 BTU/hr 41 dBA 124W 8 4

x230-10GT 16W 55 BTU/hr Fanless - - - - - -


x230-18GP 21W 72 BTU/hr 34 dBA 330W 169 BTU/hr 42 dBA 247W 16 8
x230-18GT 18W 61 BTU/hr 29 dBA - - - - - -
x230-28GP 37W 127 BTU/hr 34 dBA 520W 303 BTU/hr 42 dBA 370W 24 12
x230-28GT 26W 89 BTU/hr 34 dBA - - - - - -
x230L-17GT 15W 51 BTU/hr Fanless - - - - - -
x230L-26GT 20.5W 70 BTU/h Fanless - - - - - -

Standards and Protocols Ethernet IPv6 Features


IEEE 802.2 Logical Link Control (LLC) RFC 1981 Path MTU discovery for IPv6
AlliedWare Plus Operating System IEEE 802.3 Ethernet RFC 2460 IPv6 specification
Version 5.4.9-2 IEEE 802.3ab 1000BASE-T RFC 2464 Transmission of IPv6 packets over Ethernet
IEEE 802.3af Power over Ethernet (PoE) networks
Cryptographic Algorithms IEEE 802.3at Power over Ethernet plus (PoE+) RFC 2711 IPv6 router alert option
FIPS Approved Algorithms IEEE 802.3az Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) RFC 3484 Default address selection for IPv6
Encryption (Block Ciphers): IEEE 802.3u 100BASE-X RFC 3587 IPv6 global unicast address format
‫ ۼۼ‬AES (ECB, CBC, CFB and OFB Modes) IEEE 802.3x Flow control - full-duplex operation RFC 3596 DNS extensions to support IPv6
IEEE 802.3z 1000BASE-X RFC 4007 IPv6 scoped address architecture
‫ ۼۼ‬3DES (ECB, CBC, CFB and OFB Modes) IEEE 1588v2 Precision clock synchronization protocol v2 RFC 4193 Unique local IPv6 unicast addresses
Block Cipher Modes: RFC 4213 Transition mechanisms for IPv6 hosts and
‫ ۼۼ‬CCM IPv4 Features routers
‫ ۼۼ‬CMAC RFC 768 User Datagram Protocol (UDP) RFC 4291 IPv6 addressing architecture
RFC 791 Internet Protocol (IP) RFC 4443 Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMPv6)
‫ ۼۼ‬GCM RFC 792 Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) RFC 4861 Neighbor discovery for IPv6
‫ ۼۼ‬XTS RFC 793 Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) RFC 4862 IPv6 Stateless Address Auto-Configuration
Digital Signatures & Asymmetric Key Generation: RFC 826 Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) (SLAAC)
‫ ۼۼ‬DSA RFC 894 Standard for the transmission of IP datagrams RFC 5014 IPv6 socket API for source address selection
over Ethernet networks RFC 5095 Deprecation of type 0 routing headers in IPv6
‫ ۼۼ‬ECDSA RFC 919 Broadcasting Internet datagrams RFC 5175 IPv6 Router Advertisement (RA) flags option
‫ ۼۼ‬RSA RFC 922 Broadcasting Internet datagrams in the RFC 6105 IPv6 Router Advertisement (RA) guard
Secure Hashing: presence of subnets
‫ ۼۼ‬SHA-1 RFC 932 Subnetwork addressing scheme Management
RFC 950 Internet standard subnetting procedure AT Enterprise MIB including AMF MIB and SNMP traps
‫ ۼۼ‬SHA-2 (SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA-384. SHA-512) RFC 1042 Standard for the transmission of IP datagrams Optical DDM MIB
Message Authentication: over IEEE 802 networks SNMPv1, v2c and v3
‫ ۼۼ‬HMAC (SHA-1, SHA-2(224, 256, 384, 512) RFC 1071 Computing the Internet checksum IEEE 802.1AB Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP)
Random Number Generation: RFC 1122 Internet host requirements RFC 1155 Structure and identification of management
‫ ۼۼ‬DRBG (Hash, HMAC and Counter) RFC 1191 Path MTU discovery information for TCP/IP-based Internets
RFC 1518 An architecture for IP address allocation with RFC 1157 Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)
CIDR RFC 1212 Concise MIB definitions
Non FIPS Approved Algorithms
RFC 1519 Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) RFC 1213 MIB for network management of TCP/IP-based
RNG (AES128/192/256)
RFC 1812 Requirements for IPv4 routers Internets: MIB-II
DES
RFC 1918 IP addressing RFC 1215 Convention for defining traps for use with the
MD5
RFC 2581 TCP congestion control SNMP

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x230 Series | Enterprise Gigabit Edge Switches

RFC 1227 SNMP MUX protocol and MIB RFC 2236 Internet Group Management Protocol v2 RFC 2986 PKCS #10: certification request syntax
RFC 1239 Standard MIB (IGMPv2) specification v1.7
RFC 1724 RIPv2 MIB extension RFC 2715 Interoperability rules for multicast routing RFC 3546 Transport Layer Security (TLS) extensions
RFC 2578 Structure of Management Information v2 protocols RFC 3579 RADIUS support for Extensible
(SMIv2) RFC 3306 Unicast-prefix-based IPv6 multicast Authentication Protocol (EAP)
RFC 2579 Textual conventions for SMIv2 addresses RFC 3580 IEEE 802.1x RADIUS usage guidelines
RFC 2580 Conformance statements for SMIv2 RFC 3376 IGMPv3 RFC 3748 PPP Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)
RFC 2674 Definitions of managed objects for bridges RFC 4541 IGMP and MLD snooping switches RFC 4251 Secure Shell (SSHv2) protocol architecture
with traffic classes, multicast filtering and RFC 4252 Secure Shell (SSHv2) authentication protocol
VLAN extensions Quality of Service (QoS) RFC 4253 Secure Shell (SSHv2) transport layer protocol
RFC 2741 Agent extensibility (AgentX) protocol IEEE 802.1p Priority tagging RFC 4254 Secure Shell (SSHv2) connection protocol
RFC 2819 RMON MIB (groups 1,2,3 and 9) RFC 2211 Specification of the controlled-load network RFC 5246 Transport Layer Security (TLS) v1.2
RFC 2863 Interfaces group MIB element service RFC 5280 X.509 certificate and Certificate Revocation
RFC 3176 sFlow: a method for monitoring traffic in RFC 2474 DiffServ precedence for eight queues/port List (CRL) profile
switched and routed networks RFC 2475 DiffServ architecture RFC 5425 Transport Layer Security (TLS) transport
RFC 3411 An architecture for describing SNMP RFC 2597 DiffServ Assured Forwarding (AF) mapping for Syslog
management frameworks RFC 2697 A single-rate three-color marker RFC 5656 Elliptic curve algorithm integration for SSH
RFC 3412 Message processing and dispatching for the RFC 2698 A two-rate three-color marker RFC 6125 Domain-based application service identity
SNMP RFC 3246 DiffServ Expedited Forwarding (EF) within PKI using X.509 certificates with TLS
RFC 3413 SNMP applications RFC 6614 Transport Layer Security (TLS) encryption
RFC 3414 User-based Security Model (USM) for Resiliency Features for RADIUS
SNMPv3 IEEE 802.1AX Link aggregation (static and LACP) RFC 6668 SHA-2 data integrity verification for SSH
RFC 3415 View-based Access Control Model (VACM) IEEE 802.1D MAC bridges
for SNMP IEEE 802.1s Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP) Services
RFC 3416 Version 2 of the protocol operations for the IEEE 802.1w Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) RFC 854 Telnet protocol specification
SNMP IEEE 802.3ad S tatic and dynamic link aggregation RFC 855 Telnet option specifications
RFC 3417 Transport mappings for the SNMP RFC 857 Telnet echo option
RFC 3418 MIB for SNMP Routing Information Protocol (RIP) RFC 858 Telnet suppress go ahead option
RFC 3621 Power over Ethernet (PoE) MIB RFC 1058 Routing Information Protocol (RIP) RFC 1091 Telnet terminal-type option
RFC 3635 Definitions of managed objects for the RFC 2080 RIPng for IPv6 RFC 1350 Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP)
Ethernet-like interface types RFC 2081 RIPng protocol applicability statement RFC 1985 SMTP service extension
RFC 3636 IEEE 802.3 MAU MIB RFC 2082 RIP-2 MD5 authentication RFC 2049 MIME
RFC 4022 MIB for the Transmission Control Protocol RFC 2453 RIPv2 RFC 2131 DHCPv4 client
(TCP) RFC 2616 Hypertext Transfer Protocol - HTTP/1.1
RFC 4113 MIB for the User Datagram Protocol (UDP) Security Features RFC 2821 Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)
RFC 4188 Definitions of managed objects for bridges SSH remote login RFC 2822 Internet message format
RFC 4292 IP forwarding table MIB SSLv2 and SSLv3 RFC 3315 DHCPv6 client
RFC 4293 MIB for the Internet Protocol (IP) TACACS+ Accounting, Authentication and Authorisation RFC 4330 Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP)
RFC 4318 Definitions of managed objects for bridges (AAA) version 4
with RSTP IEEE 802.1X authentication protocols (TLS, TTLS, PEAP RFC 5905 Network Time Protocol (NTP) version 4
RFC 4560 Definitions of managed objects for remote and MD5)
ping, traceroute and lookup operations IEEE 802.1X multi-supplicant authentication VLAN support
RFC 5424 Syslog protocol IEEE 802.1X port-based network access control IEEE 802.1ad Provider bridges (VLAN stacking, Q-in-Q)
RFC 2560 X.509 Online Certificate Status Protocol IEEE 802.1Q Virtual LAN (VLAN) bridges
Multicast support (OCSP) IEEE 802.1v VLAN classification by protocol and port
IGMP query solicitation RFC 2818 HTTP over TLS (“HTTPS”) IEEE 802.3ac V LAN tagging
IGMP snooping (IGMPv1, v2 and v3) RFC 2865 RADIUS authentication
IGMP snooping fast-leave RFC 2866 RADIUS accounting Voice over IP
MLD snooping (MLDv1 and v2) RFC 2868 RADIUS attributes for tunnel protocol support LLDP-MED ANSI/TIA-1057
RFC 1112 Host extensions for IP multicasting (IGMPv1) Voice VLAN

Feature Licenses

NAME DESCRIPTION INCLUDES


AT-FL-x230-QinQ VLAN double tagging (Q-in-Q) license ‫ ۼۼ‬VLAN Q-in-Q

AT-FL-x230-OF13-1YR OpenFlow license for 1 year ‫ ۼۼ‬OpenFlow v1.3

AT-FL-x230-OF13-5YR OpenFlow license for 5 years ‫ ۼۼ‬OpenFlow v1.3

AT-FL-x230-UDLD UniDirectional Link Detection ‫ ۼۼ‬UDLD

AT-FL-x230-PTP PTP (IEEE 1588v2) license ‫ ۼۼ‬PTP Transparent Mode

6 | x230 Series 617-000519 RevZO


x230 Series | Enterprise Gigabit Edge Switches

Ordering Information AT-SPFXBD-LC-13


100BX Bi-Di (1310 nm Tx, 1550 nm Rx) fiber up to
AT-x230-10GP 10 km
L3 switch with 8 x 10/100/1000T PoE ports and
2 x 100/1000X SFP ports AT-SPFXBD-LC-15
100BX Bi-Di (1550 nm Tx, 1310 nm Rx) fiber up to
AT-x230-10GT 10 km
L3 switch with 8 x 10/100/1000T ports and
2 x 100/1000X SFP ports AT-SPTX
1000T 100 m copper
AT-x230-18GP
L3 switch with 16 x 10/100/1000T PoE ports and AT-SPSX
2 x 100/1000X SFP ports 1000SX GbE multi-mode 850 nm fiber up to 550 m

AT-x230-18GT AT-SPSX/I
L3 switch with 16 x 10/100/1000T ports and 1000SX GbE multi-mode 850 nm fiber up to 550 m
2 x 100/1000X SFP ports industrial temperature

AT-x230-28GP AT-SPEX
L3 switch with 24 x 10/100/1000T PoE ports and 1000X GbE multi-mode 1310 nm fiber up to 2 km
4 x 100/1000X SFP ports
AT-SPLX10
AT-x230-28GT 1000LX GbE single-mode 1310 nm fiber up to
L3 switch with 24 x 10/100/1000T ports and 10 km
4 x 100/1000X SFP ports
AT-SPLXI0/I
AT-x230L-17GT 1000LX GbE single-mode 1310 nm fiber up to
L3 switch with 16 x 10/100/1000T ports and 10 km industrial temperature
1 x 100/1000X SFP port
AT-SPBDI0-13
AT-x230L-26GT 1000LX GbE Bi-Di (1310 nm Tx, 1490 nm Rx) fiber
L3 switch with 24 x 10/100/1000T ports and up to 10 km
2 x 100/1000X SFP ports
AT-SPBDI0-14
AT-RKMT-J05 1000LX GbE Bi-Di (1490 nm Tx, 1310 nm Rx) fiber
Rack mount kit for x230-10GT up to 10 km

AT-RKMT-J13 AT-SPLX40
Rack mount kit for x230-18GP/18GT, x230L-17GT 1000LX GbE single-mode 1310 nm fiber up to 40 km

AT-RKMT-J14 AT-SPZX80
Rack mount kit for x230-10GP 1000ZX GbE single-mode 1550 nm fiber up to 80 km

SFP modules AT-SPBD20-13/I


1000BX GbE Bi-Di (1310 nm Tx, 1550 nm Rx) fiber
AT-SPFX/2 up to 20 km
100FX multi-mode 1310 nm fiber up to 2 km
AT-SPBD20-14/I
AT-SPFX/15 1000BX GbE Bi-Di (1490 nm Tx, 1310 nm Rx) fiber
100FX single-mode 1310 nm fiber up to 15 km up to 20 km

NETWORK SMARTER
North America Headquarters | 19800 North Creek Parkway | Suite 100 | Bothell | WA 98011 | USA | T: +1 800 424 4284 | F: +1 425 481 3895
Asia-Pacific Headquarters | 11 Tai Seng Link | Singapore | 534182 | T: +65 6383 3832 | F: +65 6383 3830
EMEA & CSA Operations | Incheonweg 7 | 1437 EK Rozenburg | The Netherlands | T: +31 20 7950020 | F: +31 20 7950021

alliedtelesis.com
© 2019 Allied Telesis, Inc. All rights reserved. Information in this document is subject to change without notice. All company names, logos, and product designs that are trademarks or registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
617-000519 RevZO

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