Vulnerability in libobsim.so: ISIS Memory Lea
Vulnerability in libobsim.so: ISIS Memory Leak Issue I...
The R2XX-SLED2-SFF= is a 2.5-inch Small Form Factor (SFF) drive sled designed for Cisco’s UCS C-Series rack servers, including the C220 M5 and C240 M5 platforms. This hot-swappable component enables secure installation of SAS, SATA, or NVMe drives, providing flexible storage configurations for enterprise data centers, cloud environments, and virtualized workloads. Its tool-less design simplifies drive maintenance while ensuring compatibility with Cisco’s Unified Computing System (UCS) architecture.
Cisco’s validation tests confirm 10,000+ insertion cycles without connector wear or signal degradation.
Supports VMware vSAN and Hyper-V Storage Spaces Direct (S2D) with NVMe drives, achieving 1M+ IOPS at 4K block sizes.
Enables Oracle Exadata-like performance with Cisco UCS C240 M5 servers using Micron 9300 MAX NVMe drives.
Deploys Kubernetes persistent volumes in ruggedized environments, surviving 5–500 Hz vibrations (MIL-STD-810G).
show storage temperature
command.No—each sled supports one interface type per bay. Use separate sleds for hybrid configurations.
storage drive test short
in CIMC.smartctl -a
).Feature | R2XX-SLED2-SFF= | Dell BOSS-S1 | HPE Gen10 SFF |
---|---|---|---|
Drive Support | SAS3/SATA3/NVMe | SATA3 only | SAS3/SATA3 |
Hot-Swap | Yes | Yes | Yes |
UCS Integration | Native | None | None |
Warranty | 3 years | 1 year | 3 years |
Cisco’s edge lies in NVMe readiness and UCS Manager automation, reducing provisioning time by 70%.
For guaranteed compatibility, itmall.sale supplies genuine R2XX-SLED2-SFF= sleds with Cisco firmware pre-validation.
During a financial firm’s NVMe upgrade, third-party sleds caused intermittent drive disconnects—costing $250K in downtime. Switching to R2XX-SLED2-SFF= resolved the issue, proving that certification matters. While cheaper alternatives tempt, they gamble with uptime. In mission-critical setups, this sled isn’t just hardware—it’s insurance. For architects, the takeaway is clear: standardization beats fragmentation. Every minute saved troubleshooting pays dividends in operational agility.