UCS-HD18TS7KL4KN= High-Density Storage Module
Hardware Architecture and Core Specifications...
The Cisco N540-28Z4C-SYS-A-V is a 2RU fixed-configuration switch engineered for high-density 25/100GbE edge-aggregation and microsecond-latency workloads. As part of the Nexus 5400 series, it features:
Unlike traditional data center switches, it integrates Cisco Crosspoint FPGAs to offload telemetry processing, reducing CPU load for analytics and encryption tasks.
Q: Does this switch support deterministic latency for financial trading or AI/ML workloads?
A: Yes. The N540-28Z4C-SYS-A-V achieves sub-500-nanosecond cut-through latency for 64B packets, critical for high-frequency trading.
Key Specifications:
Confusion often arises between this model and the N540X-16Z4GQ-A. Critical distinctions:
Feature | N540-28Z4C-SYS-A-V | N540X-16Z4GQ-A |
---|---|---|
100GbE Ports | 28 | 16 |
400GbE Ports | 4 | 8 |
Latency | 500 ns | 1.2 μs |
Target Workload | Edge AI/ML, trading | Core spine, cloud interconnect |
Running Cisco NX-OS 10.x, the switch supports:
Licensing tiers include:
Note: The Cisco Intersight subscription is mandatory for cloud-based management.
Q: Why do 25GbE links fail after breakout configuration?
A: Validate cable compatibility—passive DACs beyond 3m often cause errors. Use active optical cables (AOCs) or Cisco-certified transceivers.
Q: How to resolve buffer exhaustion during traffic spikes?
A: Enable Dynamic Buffer Sharing (DBS) and prioritize RoCEv2/FC traffic via system qos buffer-optimized
.
Though Cisco lists this model as End-of-Sale (EoS), it remains available through authorized partners like “N540-28Z4C-SYS-A-V” at itmall.sale. Verify firmware support windows (typically 5 years post-EoS) and request a Cisco TAC-supported serial number during procurement.
Despite the industry’s shift toward disaggregated white-box solutions, the N540-28Z4C-SYS-A-V offers deterministic performance that software-defined alternatives struggle to match. Its ability to handle nanosecond-sensitive workloads while scaling to 400GbE uplinks makes it a pragmatic choice for enterprises bridging legacy infrastructure and next-gen AI pipelines. In environments where predictability trumps pure cost savings—think autonomous vehicle data ingestion or real-time fraud detection—this switch remains a silent workhorse.