EasyManuals Logo

Cisco 500 Series Administration Guide

Cisco 500 Series
653 pages
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Page #248 background imageLoading...
Page #248 background image
Port Management: PoE
PoE on the Device
Cisco 500 Series Stackable Managed Switch Administration Guide 246
13
The following can be configured:
• Maximum power a PSE is allowed to supply to a PD.
• During device operation, to change the mode from Class Power Limit to
Port Limit and vice versa. The power values per port that were configured
for the Port Limit mode are retained.
NOTE Changing the mode from Class Limit to Port limit and vice versa when
the device is operational forces the PD to reboot.
• Maximum port limit allowed as a per-port numerical limit in mW (Port Limit
mode).
• To generate a trap when a PD tries to consume too much and at what
percent of the maximum power this trap is generated.
The PoE-specific hardware automatically detects the PD class and its power limit
according to the class of the device connected to each specific port (Class Limit
mode).
If at any time during the connectivity, an attached PD requires more power from
the device than the configured allocation allows (no matter if the device is in Class
Limit or Port Limit mode), the device does the following:
• Maintains the up/down status of the PoE port link
• Turns off power delivery to the PoE port
• Logs the reason for turning off power
• Generates an SNMP trap
NOTE When a lower voltage PoE device is connected to the SG500 series
device with PoE, and connected via PoE enabled ports on both ends of the
connection, the lower voltage device lose its ability to power any powered
device. To avoid this condition, either disable PoE support on the SG500 or
use a non-PoE port.
!
CAUTION Consider the following when connecting switches capable of supplying PoE:
The PoE models of the Sx200, Sx300, and SF500 series switches are PSE capable
of supplying DC power to attaching PDs. These devices include VoIP phones, IP
cameras, and wireless access points. The PoE switches can detect and supply
power to pre-standard legacy PoE PDs. Due to the support of legacy PoE, it is
possible that a PoE device acting as a PSE may mistakenly detect and supply

Table of Contents

Other manuals for Cisco 500 Series

Questions and Answers:

Question and Answer IconNeed help?

Do you have a question about the Cisco 500 Series and is the answer not in the manual?

Cisco 500 Series Specifications

General IconGeneral
ModelCisco 500 Series
CategorySwitch
MountingRack-mountable
ManagementWeb-based, CLI, SNMP
Ports24, 48
Port Speed10/100/1000 Mbps
PoE SupportAvailable on some models
Switching CapacityUp to 176 Gbps
MAC Address Table Size16, 000 entries
SecurityACLs, 802.1X
Quality of Service (QoS)Yes
DimensionsVaries by model
WeightVaries by model
Humidity10% to 90% non-condensing
Power SupplyInternal
Power ConsumptionVaries by model
Jumbo Frame SupportUp to 9216 bytes

Related product manuals