Table 21: End-of-Life Routing Engine Specifications (continued)
EOL Details
First Junos OS
SupportMediaDisk
Connection
to PFEsMemoryProcessor
Routing
Engine
PSN-2008-02-018
5.31 GB
CompactFlash
card
40 GB hard
disk
Fast
Ethernet
2048 MB600-MHz
Pentium III
RE-600-2048
PSN-2011-04-226
7.21 GB
CompactFlash
card
40 GB hard
disk
Fast
Ethernet
1536 MB850-MHz
Pentium III
RE-850-1536
FA-HW-0101-001
3.280 MB
CompactFlash
card
6.4 GB hard
disk
Fast
Ethernet
256 MB200-MHz
Pentium
RE-M40
PSN-2003-01-063
4.280 MB
CompactFlash
card
10 GB hard
disk
Fast
Ethernet
768 MB333-MHz
Pentium II
RE-M40-333-768
PSN-2004-11-020
5.4128 MB
CompactFlash
card
30 GB hard
disk
Fast
Ethernet
2048 MB600-MHz
Pentium III
RE-M40-600-2048
PSN-2008-02-019
6.21 GB
CompactFlash
card
40 GB hard
disk
Gigabit
Ethernet
2048 MB1.6-GHz
Pentium M
RE-1600-2048
NOTE: The memory in Table 20 on page 31 indicates the amount of total
memory. To determine the amount of available memory, issue the show
chassis routing-engine CLI command.
On routers that accept two Routing Engines, you cannot mix Routing Engine types except
for a brief period (one minute or so) during an upgrade or downgrade to two Routing
Engines of the same type.
Related
Documentation
Supported Routing Engines by Router on page 33•
Supported Routing Engines by Router
The following tables list the Routing Engines that each router supports, the first supported
release for the Routing Engine in the specified router, the management Ethernet interface,
and the internal Ethernet interfaces for each Routing Engine.
•
M7i Routing Engines on page 34
•
M10i Routing Engines on page 34
•
M40e Routing Engines on page 35
33Copyright © 2017, Juniper Networks, Inc.
Chapter 4: Host Subsystem Components and Descriptions