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Dell S6000–ON - Converting a QSFP or QSFP+ Port to an SFP or SFP+ Port

Dell S6000–ON
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Split a single 40G port into four 10G ports.
CONFIGURATION mode
Important Points to Remember
Splitting a 40G port into four 10G ports is supported on standalone and stacked units.
You cannot use split ports as stack-link to stack a system.
To verify port splitting, use the show system stack-unit stack-unit-number fanout {count |
configure} command.
To verify port splitting, use the show system stack-unit 1 fanout {count | configure}
command
The quad port must be in a default configuration before you can split it into 4x10G ports. The 40G
port is lost in the configuration when the port is split; be sure that the port is also removed from other
L2/L3 feature configurations.
Converting a QSFP or QSFP+ Port to an SFP or SFP+ Port
You can convert a QSFP or QSFP+ port to an SFP or SFP+ port using the Quad to Small Form Factor
Pluggable Adapter (QSA).
QSA provides smooth connectivity between devices that use Quad Lane Ports (such as the 40 Gigabit
Ethernet adapters) and 10 Gigabit hardware that uses SFP+ based cabling. Using this adapter, you can
effectively use a QSFP or QSFP+ module to connect to a lower-end switch or server that uses an SFP or
SFP+ based module.
When connected to a QSFP or QSFP+ port on a 40 Gigabit adapter, QSA acts as an interface for the SFP
or SFP+ cables. This interface enables you to directly plug in an SFP or SFP+ cable originating at a 10
Gigabit Ethernet port on a switch or server.
You can use QSFP optical cables (without a QSA) to split a 40 Gigabit port on a switch or a server into
four 10 Gigabit ports. To split the ports, .enable the fan-out mode.
Similarly, you can enable the fan-out mode to configure the QSFP port on a device to act as an SFP or
SFP+ port. As the QSA enables a QSFP or QSFP+ port to be used as an SFP or SFP+ port, Dell Networking
OS does not immediately detect the QSA after you insert it into a QSFP port cage.
After you insert an SFP or SFP+ cable into a QSA connected to a 40 Gigabit port, Dell Networking OS
assumes that all the four fanned-out 10 Gigabit ports have plugged-in SFP or SFP+ optical cables.
However, the link UP event happens only for the first 10 Gigabit port and you can use only that port for
data transfer. As a result, only the first fanned-out port is identified as the active 10 Gigabit port with a
speed of 10G or 1G depending on whether you insert an SFP+ or SFP cable respectively.
NOTE: Although it is possible to configure the remaining three 10 Gigabit ports, the Link UP event
does not occur for these ports leaving the lanes unusable. Dell Networking OS perceives these ports
to be in a Link Down state. You must not try to use these remaining three 10 Gigabit ports for actual
data transfer or for any other related configurations.
Interfaces
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