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 36•
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 36
•
M10i Routing Engines on page 37
•
M40e Routing Engines on page 37
•
M120 Routing Engines on page 38
•
M320 Routing Engines on page 38
•
MX5, MX10, MX40, and MX80 Routing Engine on page 39
•
MX104 Routing Engines on page 39
•
MX240 Routing Engines on page 39
•
MX480 Routing Engines on page 40
•
MX960 Routing Engines on page 41
•
MX2008 Routing Engines on page 42
•
MX2010 Routing Engines on page 42
•
MX2020 Supported Routing Engines on page 43
•
PTX3000 Routing Engines on page 43
•
PTX5000 Routing Engines on page 44
•
T320 Routing Engines on page 44
•
T640 Routing Engines on page 44
•
T1600 Routing Engines on page 45
•
T4000 Routing Engines on page 46
•
TX Matrix Routing Engines on page 46
•
TX Matrix Plus Routing Engines on page 47
•
TX Matrix Plus (with 3D SIBs) Routing Engines on page 47
M7i Routing Engines
Table 18 on page 37 lists the Routing Engines supported by the M7i router. The M7i router
supports 32-bit Junos OS only.
Copyright © 2017, Juniper Networks, Inc.36
MX240 3D Universal Edge Router Hardware Guide