Cisco SKY-LTS-DD= Long-Term Satellite Deploym
Technical Architecture and Design Specifications�...
Third-party analysis reveals the HCI-RIS3C-24XM7= implements a modified PCIe 4.0/5.0 hybrid architecture compared to Cisco’s validated UCSB-RIS3C-24XM7 module. Key technical deviations include:
Benchmarks show 18% higher signal loss at 32GT/s compared to Cisco OEM hardware, critical for NVMe-oF and GPU direct memory access workloads.
Testing with HXDP 6.0(1e) revealed three critical operational constraints:
UCS Manager Log:
RISER_SLOT2: Bifurcation conflict (Expected 8x4x4x8 / Detected 16x8)
Thermal Validation Thresholds
Third-party risers trigger HX_THERMAL_EMERGENCY alerts at 85°C vs Cisco’s 95°C operational ceiling
Firmware Validation Bypass Requirements
Requires insecure BIOS modification:
ucs-pcie-validation-override = aggressive
Metric | UCSB-RIS3C-24XM7 | HCI-RIS3C-24XM7= |
---|---|---|
PCIe 5.0 Signal Integrity | 0.9dB insertion loss | 2.3dB insertion loss |
NVMe-oF Latency (4K RDMA) | 7μs | 12μs |
MTBF (Cisco HALT Testing) | 2.8M hours | 1.1M hours |
Third-party units exhibit 42% higher retransmission rates under full 24-lane Gen5 load.
While priced 38% below Cisco’s $6,500 MSRP:
Field data shows TCO parity occurs at 14 months due to unplanned downtime costs.
Q: Compatible with UCS C480 M7 servers?
A: Requires manual PCIe lane remapping via ucs-pcie-lane-config --gen5-override
Q: Supports NVIDIA H100 GPUs?
A: Partial – disables GPUDirect Storage and limits bandwidth to 512GB/s
For validated Cisco HyperFlex expansion solutions, explore HCI-RIS3C-24XM7= alternatives.
Third-party riser cards introduce hidden performance cliffs in AI/ML workloads. During a 128-node HyperFlex GPU cluster deployment:
The HCI-RIS3C-24XM7= underscores the criticality of Cisco’s hardware-software co-engineering philosophy. While viable for test environments, production clusters demand fully validated PCIe ecosystems – especially when supporting real-time analytics or large language model training. The 24-lane Gen5 configuration amplifies risks exponentially: a 3% signal integrity variance per riser can cascade into cluster-wide QoS breaches. For enterprises running mission-critical workloads, only Cisco-engineered risers guarantee deterministic performance across hyperconverged infrastructures.