IE340 Series: Industrial Ethernet Layer 3 Switches
IE340 Series: Industrial Ethernet Layer 3 Switches
IE340 Series: Industrial Ethernet Layer 3 Switches
IE340 Series
Industrial Ethernet Layer 3 Switches
Allied Telesis ruggedized IE340 Industrial Ethernet switches provide enduring
performance in harsh environments, such as those found in manufacturing,
transportation and physical security. Offering high throughput, rich
functionality and advanced security features, IE340 switches deliver the
performance and reliability demanded by deployments in the age of the
Internet of Things (IoT).
Key Features
Allied Telesis Autonomous VLAN Mirroring (RSPAN) this deterministic communication network
Management FrameworkTM (AMF) ۼVLAN mirroring allows traffic from a port on a is designed to provide precise timing for
ۼAMF is a sophisticated suite of management tools remote switch to be analyzed locally. Traffic being automation applications and measurement
that provide a simplified approach to network transmitted or received on the port is duplicated systems.
management. Common tasks are automated or and sent across the network on a special VLAN. ۼIE340 supports IEEE 1588-2008 (PTPv2)
made so simple that the every-day running of a as Transparent Clock End-to-End mode, and
network can be achieved without the need for VLAN Translation performs an active role on Ethernet networks
highly-trained, and expensive, network engineers. ۼVLAN Translation allows traffic arriving on a VLAN reducing the effects of Jitter.
Powerful features like centralized management, to be mapped to a different VLAN on the outgoing
auto-backup, auto-upgrade, auto-provisioning paired interface. Power over Ethernet Plus (PoE+)
and auto-recovery enable plug-and-play ۼWith PoE, a separate power connection to
ۼIn Metro networks, it is common for a network
networking and zero-touch management. media endpoints such as IP phones and
Service Provider (SP) to give each customer
ۼAMF secure mode encrypts all AMF traffic, their own unique VLAN, yet at the customer wireless access points is not necessary. PoE+
provides unit and user authorization, and location give all customers the same VLAN-ID for reduces costs and provides even greater
monitors network access to greatly enhance tagged packets to use on the wire. SPs can use flexibility, providing the capability to connect
network security. VLAN Translation to change the tagged packet’s devices requiring more power (up to 30 Watts)
VLAN-ID at the customer location to the VLAN-ID such as pan, tilt and zoom security cameras.
Software Defined Networking (SDN) for tagged packets to use within the SP’s network. ۼThe IE340 series allows the configuration of
ۼOpenFlow is a key technology that enables the the overall PoE power budget to match the
ۼThis feature is also useful in Enterprise
use of SDN to build smart applications that unlock environments where it can be used to merge two real capabilities of the external Power Supply
value and reduce cost. networks together, without manually reconfiguring Unit (PSU). The PoE power budget is allocated
the VLAN numbering scheme. This situation can automatically and dynamically, based on the
Resiliency current usage of each powered device.
occur if two companies have merged and the
ۼEPSRing™ and ITU-T G.8032 enable a protected same VLAN-ID is used for two different purposes. ۼIf the devices connected to a switch require
ring capable of recovery within as little as 50ms. more power than the switch is capable of
These features are perfect for high performance VLAN ACLs delivering, the switch will deny power to some
and high availability. ۼSimplify access and traffic control across entire ports, according to the assigned priority.
ۼSpanning Tree Protocol compatible. RSTP, MSTP, segments of the network. Access Control Lists
static Link Aggregation Group (LAG), and dynamic (ACLs) can be applied to a VLAN as well as a Continuous PoE
Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) support. specific port. ۼContinuous PoE allows the switch to be
restarted without affecting the supply of power
Quality of Service (QoS) Security (Tri-Authentication) to connected devices. Smart lighting, security
ۼComprehensive low-latency wire-speed QoS ۼAuthentication options on the IE340 Series also cameras, and other PoE devices will continue
provides flow-based traffic management with include alternatives to IEEE 802.1X port-based to operate during a software upgrade on the
full classification, prioritization, traffic shaping authentication, such as web authentication, to switch.
and min/max bandwidth profiles. Enjoy boosted enable guest access and MAC authentication
network performance and guaranteed delivery for endpoints that do not have an IEEE 802.1X Industrial Automation
of business-critical Ethernet services and supplicant. All three authentication methods— ۼModbus/TCP is intended for supervision and
applications. Time-critical services like voice IEEE 802.1X, MAC-based and Web-based—can control of automation equipment; that is a
and video applications take precedence over be enabled simultaneously on the same port for variant of the MODBUS protocol using the TCP/
non-essential services like file downloads, tri-authentication. IP for communications on Ethernet networks.
maintaining responsiveness of Enterprise
applications. Upstream Forwarding Only (UFO) Alarm Input/Output
ۼUFO lets you manage which ports in a VLAN can ۼAlarm Input and Alarm Output are useful for
sFlow communicate with each other, and which only security integration solutions. These respond
ۼsFlow is an industry standard technology for have upstream access to services, for secure to events instantly and automatically on a
monitoring high speed switched networks. It multi-user deployment. pre-defined event scheme, and send an alert
provides complete visibility into network use, message to the monitoring control center.
enabling performance optimization, usage Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol The 2-pin terminal blocks may be connected
accounting/billing, and defense against security to sensors and actuator relays. Alarm Input
(DHCP) Snooping
threats. Sampled packets sent to a collector ensure receives signals from external devices like
it always has a real-time view of network traffic. ۼDHCP servers allocate IP addresses to clients,
motion sensors and magnets that will trigger
and the switch keeps a record of addresses
subsequent actions if something changes.
Active Fiber Monitoring (AFM) issued on each port. IP source guard checks
Alarm Output controls external devices upon
ۼActive Fiber Monitoring prevents eavesdropping
against this DHCP snooping database to ensure
an event, for example sirens, strobes and PTZ
on fiber communications by monitoring received only clients with specific IP and/or MAC address
cameras.
optical power. If an intrusion is detected, the link can access the network. DHCP snooping can
can be automatically shut down, or an operator be combined with other features, like dynamic Enhanced Thermal Shutdown
alert can be sent. ARP inspection, to increase security in layer 2
ۼThe Enhanced Thermal Shutdown feature acts
switched environments, and also provides a
to restrict PoE power and services when the
Link Layer Discovery Protocol – traceable history, which meets the growing legal
switch exceeds the safe operating temperature.
Media Endpoint Discovery requirements placed on service providers.
The system restores operation when the
(LLDP – MED) temperature returns to acceptable levels.
Precise time synchronization with
ۼLLDP-MED extends LLDP basic network endpoint sub-microsecond precision
discovery and management functions. LLDP-MED Premium Software License
(IEEE 1588-2008 PTPv2)
allows for media endpoint specific messages, ۼBy default, the IE340 Series offers a
ۼMeasurement and automation systems involving comprehensive Layer 2 and Layer 3 feature
providing detailed information on power
equipments, network policy, location discovery multiple devices often require accurate timing set that includes static routing and IPv6
(for Emergency Call Services) and inventory. in order to facilitate event synchronization and management features. The feature set can
data correlation. The IEEE 1588 Precise Time easily be upgraded with premium
Protocol is a fault tolerant method enabling software licenses.
clock synchronization in a distributed system
that communicates using an Ethernet network;
Key Solutions
Server Farm
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10 Gigabit link
1 Gigabit link
100 Megabit link
Link aggregation
EPSRingTM and ITU-T G.8032 provide high-speed resilient PoE models feed 30 Watts per port, and support remotely
ring connectivity. This diagram shows the IE Series in a controlled Pan, Tilt and Zoom (PTZ) video cameras.
double ring network topology.
Management can be automated with the Allied Telesis
The IE Series operates at a wide temperature range, Autonomous Management FrameworkTM (AMF).
and allows deployment in outdoor and harsh industrial
environments.
Specifications
10/100/1000T (RJ-45) 100/1000X 1000X 1/10 GIGABIT POE+ ENABLED SWITCHING FORWARDING
PRODUCT TOTAL PORTS
COPPER PORTS SFP PORTS SFP PORTS SFP+ PORTS PORTS FABRIC RATE
IE340-20GP 16 4 - - 20 16 40Gbps 29.7Mpps
Performance ۼEvent logging via Syslog over IPv4 ۼExtensive remarking capabilities
RAM memory 512MB DDR SDRAM ۼFind-me device locator ۼIP precedence and DiffServ marking based on Layer
ROM memory 128MB flash 2, 3 and 4 headers
MAC address 16K entries ۼOptical Digital Diagnostic Monitoring (DDM)
Packet Buffer 1.5 MBytes (12.2 Mbits) ۼPing polling for IPv4 and IPv6 ۼLimit bandwidth per port or per traffic class down
Priority Queues 8 to 64kbps
ۼPort and VLAN mirroring (RSPAN)
Simultaneous VLANs 4K ۼPolicy-based QoS based on VLAN, port, MAC and
VLANs ID range 1 – 4094 ۼTraceRoute for IPv4 and IPv6 general packet classifiers
Jumbo frames 9KB jumbo packets ۼUniDirectional Link Detection (UDLD) ۼPolicy-based storm protection
Multicast groups 511 (Layer 2), or
256 (Layer 2) and 256 (Layer 3)4 ۼStrict priority, weighted round robin or mixed
IPv4 Features
scheduling
ۼBlack hole routing
Other Interfaces ۼTaildrop for queue congestion control
ۼDirected broadcast forwarding
Type Serial console (UART) ۼWirespeed traffic classification with low latency
Port no. 1 ۼDHCP server and relay essential for VoIP and real-time streaming media
Connector RJ-45 female ۼDNS relay applications
ۼEqual Cost Multi Path (ECMP) routing
Type USB2.0 (Host Controller Class) Resiliency Features
Port no. 13 ۼRoute redistribution (OSPF, RIP, and BGP)
ۼControl Plane Prioritization (CPP) ensures the CPU
Connector Type A receptacle ۼStatic unicast and multicast routes for IPv4
always has sufficient bandwidth to process network
ۼUDP broadcast helper (IP helper) control traffic
Type Alarm input (320µA @3.3Vdc)
Port no. 1 ۼDynamic link failover (host attach)
IPv6 Features
Connector 2-pin Terminal Block ۼEthernet Protection Switching Ring (EPSR) with
ۼDHCPv6 server and relay SuperLoop Prevention (EPSR-SLP)
Type Alarm output (0.5A @30Vdc) ۼDevice management over IPv6 networks with ۼEthernet Ring Protection Switching (G.8032 ERPS)
Port no. 1 SNMPv6, Telnetv6 and SSHv6
ۼLoop protection: loop detection and thrash limiting
Connector 2-pin Terminal Block ۼDNSv6 relay
ۼPVST+ compatibility mode
ۼIPv4 and IPv6 dual stack
Type Power Input ۼRouter Redundancy Protocol (RRP) snooping
Port no. 2 ۼIPv6 hardware ACLs
ۼSpanning Tree Protocol (STP) root guard
Connector 2-pin Terminal Block ۼNTPv6 client and server
ۼStatic unicast routing for IPv6 Security Features
Reliability
ۼAccess Control Lists (ACLs) based on layer 3 and
ۼModular AlliedWare™ operating system
Management 4 headers
ۼRedundant power input ۼFront panel LEDs provide at-a-glance PSU status, ۼConfigurable ACLs for management traffic
ۼFull environmental monitoring of temperature PoE status, and fault information
ۼAuthentication, Authorization and Accounting (AAA)
and internal voltages. SNMP traps alert network ۼAllied Telesis Autonomous Management Framework
managers in case of any failure (AMF) node ۼAuth fail and guest VLANs
ۼEnhanced Thermal Shutdown ۼConsole management port on the front panel for ۼBootloader can be password protected for device
ease of access security
Flexibility and Compatibility ۼEco-friendly mode allows ports and LEDs to be ۼBPDU protection
ۼGigabit SFP ports supports any combination of disabled to save power ۼDHCP snooping, IP source guard and Dynamic ARP
Allied Telesis 10Mbps, 100Mbps and 1Gbps SFP Inspection (DAI)
ۼIndustry-standard CLI with context-sensitive help
modules listed in this document under Ordering
ۼPowerful CLI scripting engine ۼDoS attack blocking and virus throttling
Information
ۼBuilt-in text editor ۼDynamic VLAN assignment
Industrial Automation ۼEvent-based triggers allow user-defined scripts to ۼMAC address filtering and MAC address lockdown
ۼIEEE 1588v2 1-step End-to-End Transparent Clock be executed upon selected system events ۼNetwork Access and Control (NAC) features
ۼModbus/TCP ۼSNMPv1/v2c/v3 support manage endpoint security
ۼComprehensive SNMP MIB support for standards ۼPort-based learn limits (intrusion detection)
Diagnostic Tools based device management ۼPrivate VLANs provide security and port isolation
ۼActive Fiber Monitoring detects tampering on ۼUSB interface allows software release files, for multiple customers using the same VLAN
optical links configurations and other files to be stored for ۼRADIUS local server (100 users) and accounting
ۼAutomatic link flap detection and port shutdown backup and distribution to other devices3 ۼSecure Copy (SCP)
ۼBuilt-In Self Test (BIST) ۼRecessed Reset button ۼStrong password security and encryption
ۼCable fault locator (TDR) ۼTACACS+authentication and accounting
ۼConnectivity Fault Management (CFM) - Continuity
Quality of Service
ۼTri-authentication: MAC-based, web-based and
Check Protocol (CCP) for use with G.8032 ERPS ۼ8 priority queues with a hierarchy of high priority
IEEE 802.1X
queues for real-time traffic, and mixed scheduling,
3
for each switch port
IE340L model does not support this feature.
4
When PIM is enabled.
Physical Specifications
Power Characteristics
MAX POE
NO POE LOAD FULL POE LOAD11
MAX POE SOURCING PORTS
PRODUCT INPUT VOLTAGE10 COOLING
MAX POWER MAX HEAT MAX POWER MAX HEAT POWER POE POE+
NOISE NOISE
CONSUMPTION DISSIPATION CONSUMPTION DISSIPATION (15W) (30W)
IE340-20GP 18~57V DC fanless 24W 81.9 BTU/hr - 271W 105.8 BTU/hr - 240W 16 8
IE340L-18GP 48V DC fanless 24W 81.9 BTU/hr - 271W 105.8 BTU/hr - 240W 16 8
10
PoE sourcing equipment require:
48Vdc to enable IEEE802.3at Type 1 (PoE)
54Vdc to enable IEEE802.3at Type 2 (PoE+)
11
The Max Power consumption at full PoE load includes the powered device’s consumption and margin. The cooling requirements of the switch are smaller than the power draw, because most of the load is dissipated at the PoE
powered device and along the cabling. Use these wattage and BTU ratings for facility capacity planning.
Standards and Protocols RFC 793 Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) RFC 1215 Convention for defining traps for use with the
RFC 826 Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) SNMP
AlliedWare Plus Operating System RFC 894 Standard for the transmission of IP datagrams RFC 1227 SNMP MUX protocol and MIB
Version 5.4.9-2 over Ethernet networks RFC 1239 Standard MIB
RFC 919 Broadcasting Internet datagrams RFC 1724 RIPv2 MIB extension
RFC 922 Broadcasting Internet datagrams in the RFC 2578 Structure of Management Information v2
Authentication
presence of subnets (SMIv2)
RFC 1321 MD5 Message-Digest algorithm
RFC 932 Subnetwork addressing scheme RFC 2579 Textual conventions for SMIv2
RFC 1828 IP authentication using keyed MD5
RFC 950 Internet standard subnetting procedure RFC 2580 Conformance statements for SMIv2
RFC 951 Bootstrap Protocol (BootP) RFC 2674 Definitions of managed objects for bridges
Automation RFC 1027 Proxy ARP with traffic classes, multicast filtering
Modbus/TCP RFC 1035 DNS client and VLAN extensions
IEEE 1588-2008 Precision Clock Synchronization Protocol v2 RFC 1042 Standard for the transmission of IP datagrams RFC 2741 Agent extensibility (AgentX) protocol
over IEEE 802 networks RFC 2787 Definitions of managed objects for VRRP
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) RFC 1071 Computing the Internet checksum RFC 2819 RMON MIB (groups 1,2,3 and 9)
BGP dynamic capability RFC 1122 Internet host requirements RFC 2863 Interfaces group MIB
BGP outbound route filtering RFC 1191 Path MTU discovery RFC 3176 sFlow: a method for monitoring traffic in
RFC 1772 Application of the Border Gateway Protocol RFC 1256 ICMP router discovery messages switched and routed networks
(BGP) in the Internet RFC 1518 An architecture for IP address allocation with RFC 3411 An architecture for describing SNMP
RFC 1997 BGP communities attribute CIDR management frameworks
RFC 2439 BGP route flap damping RFC 1519 Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) RFC 3412 Message processing and dispatching for the
RFC 2545 Use of BGP-4 multiprotocol extensions for IPv6 RFC 1542 Clarifications and extensions for BootP SNMP
inter-domain routing RFC 1591 Domain Name System (DNS) RFC 3413 SNMP applications
RFC 2918 Route refresh capability for BGP-4 RFC 1812 Requirements for IPv4 routers RFC 3414 User-based Security Model (USM) for SNMPv3
RFC 3882 Configuring BGP to block Denial-of-Service RFC 1918 IP addressing RFC 3415 View-based Access Control Model (VACM) for
(DoS) attacks RFC 2581 TCP congestion control SNMP
RFC 4271 Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4) RFC 3416 Version 2 of the protocol operations for the
RFC 4360 BGP extended communities IPv6 Features SNMP
RFC 4456 BGP route reflection - an alternative to full RFC 1981 Path MTU discovery for IPv6 RFC 3417 Transport mappings for the SNMP
mesh iBGP RFC 2460 IPv6 specification RFC 3418 MIB for SNMP
RFC 4724 BGP graceful restart RFC 2464 Transmission of IPv6 packets over Ethernet RFC 3621 Power over Ethernet (PoE) MIB
RFC 4760 Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4 networks RFC 3635 Definitions of managed objects for the
RFC 5065 Autonomous system confederations for BGP RFC 3484 Default address selection for IPv6 Ethernet-like interface types
RFC 5492 Capabilities Advertisement with BGP-4 RFC 3587 IPv6 global unicast address format RFC 3636 IEEE 802.3 MAU MIB
RFC 5925 The TCP Authentication Option RFC 3596 DNS extensions to support IPv6 RFC 4022 MIB for the Transmission Control Protocol
RFC 6793 BGP Support for Four-Octet Autonomous RFC 4007 IPv6 scoped address architecture (TCP)
System (AS) Number Space RFC 4193 Unique local IPv6 unicast addresses RFC 4113 MIB for the User Datagram Protocol (UDP)
RFC 7606 Revised Error Handling for BGP UPDATE RFC 4213 Transition mechanisms for IPv6 hosts and RFC 4188 Definitions of managed objects for bridges
Messages routers RFC 4292 IP forwarding table MIB
RFC 4291 IPv6 addressing architecture RFC 4293 MIB for the Internet Protocol (IP)
Encryption (management traffic only) RFC 4443 Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMPv6) RFC 4318 Definitions of managed objects for bridges
FIPS 180-1 Secure Hash standard (SHA-1) RFC 4861 Neighbor discovery for IPv6 with RSTP
FIPS 186 Digital signature standard (RSA) RFC 4862 IPv6 Stateless Address Auto-Configuration RFC 4560 Definitions of managed objects for remote ping,
FIPS 46-3 Data Encryption Standard (DES and 3DES) (SLAAC) traceroute and lookup operations
RFC 5014 IPv6 socket API for source address selection RFC 5424 The Syslog protocol
Ethernet RFC 5095 Deprecation of type 0 routing headers in IPv6 RFC 6527 Definitions of managed objects for VRRPv3
IEEE 802.2 Logical Link Control (LLC) RFC 5175 IPv6 Router Advertisement (RA) flags option
IEEE 802.3 Ethernet RFC 6105 IPv6 Router Advertisement (RA) guard Multicast Support
IEEE 802.3ab 1000BASE-T Bootstrap Router (BSR) mechanism for PIM-SM
IEEE 802.3af Power over Ethernet (PoE) Management IGMP query solicitation
IEEE 802.3at Power over Ethernet up to 30W (PoE+) AT Enterprise MIB including AMF MIB and traps IGMP snooping (IGMPv1, v2 and v3)
IEEE 802.3az Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) Optical DDM MIB IGMP snooping fast-leave
IEEE 802.3u 100BASE-X SNMPv1, v2c and v3 IGMP/MLD multicast forwarding (IGMP/MLD proxy)
IEEE 802.3x Flow control - full-duplex operation IEEE 802.1AB Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) MLD snooping (MLDv1 and v2)
IEEE 802.3z 1000BASE-X RFC 1155 Structure and identification of management PIM-SM and SSM for IPv6
information for TCP/IP-based Internets RFC 2236 Internet Group Management Protocol v2
IPv4 Features RFC 1157 Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) (IGMPv2)
RFC 768 User Datagram Protocol (UDP) RFC 1212 Concise MIB definitions RFC 2710 Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) for IPv6
RFC 791 Internet Protocol (IP) RFC 1213 MIB for network management of TCP/IP-based RFC 2715 Interoperability rules for multicast routing
RFC 792 Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) Internets: MIB-II protocols
RFC 3306 Unicast-prefix-based IPv6 multicast addresses Resiliency Features RFC 6125 Domain-based application service identity
RFC 3376 IGMPv3 ITU-T G.8023 / Y.1344 Ethernet Ring Protection within PKI using X.509 certificates with TLS
RFC 3590 Source Address Selection for the Multicast Switching (ERPS) RFC 6614 Transport Layer Security (TLS) encryption for
Listener Discovery (MLD) Protocol IEEE 802.1ag CFM Continuity Check Protocol (CCP) RADIUS
RFC 3810 Multicast Listener Discovery v2 (MLDv2) for IEEE 802.1AX Link aggregation (static and LACP) RFC 6668 SHA-2 data integrity verification for SSH
IPv6 IEEE 802.1D MAC bridges
RFC 3956 Embedding the Rendezvous Point (RP) address IEEE 802.1s Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP) Services
in an IPv6 multicast address IEEE 802.1w Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) RFC 854 Telnet protocol specification
RFC 3973 PIM Dense Mode (DM) IEEE 802.3ad S tatic and dynamic link aggregation RFC 855 Telnet option specifications
RFC 4541 IGMP and MLD snooping switches RFC 5798 Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol version 3 RFC 857 Telnet echo option
RFC 4604 Using IGMPv3 and MLDv2 for source-specific (VRRPv3) for IPv4 and IPv6 RFC 858 Telnet suppress go ahead option
multicast RFC 1091 Telnet terminal-type option
RFC 4607 Source-specific multicast for IP Routing Information Protocol (RIP) RFC 1350 The TFTP protocol (revision 2)
RFC 7761 Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode RFC 1058 Routing Information Protocol (RIP) RFC 1985 SMTP service extension
(PIM-SM): Protocol specification RFC 2080 RIPng for IPv6 RFC 2049 MIME
RFC 2081 RIPng protocol applicability statement RFC 2131 DHCPv4 (server, relay and client)
Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) RFC 2082 RIP-2 MD5 authentication RFC 2132 DHCP options and BootP vendor extensions
OSPF link-local signaling RFC 2453 RIPv2 RFC 2616 Hypertext Transfer Protocol - HTTP/1.1
OSPF MD5 authentication RFC 2821 Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)
OSPF restart signaling Security Features RFC 2822 Internet message format
Out-of-band LSDB resync SSH remote login RFC 3046 DHCP relay agent information option (DHCP
RFC 1245 OSPF protocol analysis SSLv2 and SSLv3 option 82)
RFC 1246 Experience with the OSPF protocol TACACS+ Accounting, Authentication, Authorization (AAA) RFC 3315 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6
RFC 1370 Applicability statement for OSPF IEEE 802.1X authentication protocols (TLS, TTLS, PEAP and (DHCPv6)
RFC 1765 OSPF database overflow MD5) RFC 3396 Encoding Long Options in the Dynamic Host
RFC 2328 OSPFv2 IEEE 802.1X multi-supplicant authentication Configuration Protocol (DHCPv4)
RFC 2370 OSPF opaque LSA option IEEE 802.1X port-based network access control RFC 3633 IPv6 prefix options for DHCPv6
RFC 2740 OSPFv3 for IPv6 RFC 2818 HTTP over TLS (“HTTPS”) RFC 3646 DNS configuration options for DHCPv6
RFC 3101 OSPF Not-So-Stubby Area (NSSA) option RFC 2865 RADIUS authentication RFC 3993 Subscriber-ID suboption for DHCP relay agent
RFC 3509 Alternative implementations of OSPF area RFC 2866 RADIUS accounting option
border routers RFC 2868 RADIUS attributes for tunnel protocol support RFC 4954 SMTP Service Extension for Authentication
RFC 3623 Graceful OSPF restart RFC 2986 PKCS #10: certification request syntax RFC 5905 Network Time Protocol (NTP) version 4
RFC 3630 Traffic engineering extensions to OSPF specification v1.7
RFC 4552 Authentication/confidentiality for OSPFv3 RFC 3579 RADIUS support for Extensible Authentication VLAN Support
RFC 5329 Traffic engineering extensions to OSPFv3 Protocol (EAP) Generic VLAN Registration Protocol (GVRP)
RFC 5340 OSPFv3 for IPv6 (partial support) RFC 3580 IEEE 802.1x RADIUS usage guidelines IEEE 802.1ad Provider bridges (VLAN stacking, Q-in-Q)
RFC 3748 Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) IEEE 802.1Q Virtual LAN (VLAN) bridges
Quality of Service (QoS) RFC 4251 Secure Shell (SSHv2) protocol architecture IEEE 802.1v VLAN classification by protocol and port
IEEE 802.1p Priority tagging RFC 4252 Secure Shell (SSHv2) authentication protocol IEEE 802.3ac V LAN tagging
RFC 2211 Specification of the controlled-load network RFC 4253 Secure Shell (SSHv2) transport layer protocol
element service RFC 4254 Secure Shell (SSHv2) connection protocol Voice over IP (VoIP)
RFC 2474 DiffServ precedence for eight queues/port RFC 5246 Transport Layer Security (TLS) v1.2 Voice VLAN
RFC 2475 DiffServ architecture RFC 5280 X.509 certificate and Certificate Revocation ANSI/TIA-1057 Link Layer Discovery Protocol-Media
RFC 2597 DiffServ Assured Forwarding (AF) List (CRL) profile Endpoint Discovery (LLDP-MED)
RFC 2697 A single-rate three-color marker RFC 5425 Transport Layer Security (TLS) transport
RFC 2698 A two-rate three-color marker mapping for Syslog
RFC 3246 DiffServ Expedited Forwarding (EF) RFC 5656 Elliptic curve algorithm integration for SSH
Feature Licenses
AT-SPBD40-13/I AT-SPFXBD-LC-13
40 km, 1G BiDi SFP, LC, SMF, I-Temp, 15 km, 100FX BiDi SFP, LC, SMF, (1310 Tx/1550 Rx)
(1310Tx/1490Rx)
AT-SPFXBD-LC-15
AT-SPBD40-14/I 15 km, 100FX BiDi SFP, LC, SMF, (1550 Rx/1310 Tx)
40 km, 1G BiDi SFP, LC, SMF, I-Temp,
(1490Tx/ 1310Rx) Accessories
AT-SPEX AT-VT-Kit3
2 km, 1000EX SFP, LC, MMF, 1310 nm Management cable (USB to serial console)
AT-SPEX/E
2 km, 1000EX SFP, LC, MMF, 1310 nm, Ext. Temp
12
Available in Japan only.
AT-SPLX10/I
10 km, 1000LX SFP, LC, SMF, 1310 nm, I-Temp 13
IE340L model does not support this feature.
NETWORK SMARTER
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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.
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