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The XR-1K4OR-732K9= is a 4-port 400G line card for Cisco 8000 Series routers, designed for hyperscale DCI (Data Center Interconnect) and 5G edge core networks. Cisco’s technical documentation identifies it as a Gen3 QSFP-DD module with Cisco Silicon One G313 ASIC integration. Key hardware features include:
The line card supports IOS XR 7.8.1+, enabling Segment Routing over IPv6 (SRv6) and EVPN-VPWS for multi-cloud orchestration.
In Cisco’s 2023 Interconnect Validation Report, the XR-1K4OR-732K9= achieved 3.2Tbps bidirectional throughput across 8x 400G links using FlexE group bonding, sustaining <0.0001% packet loss at 100% line rate.
A Tier 1 carrier processed 42M packets/sec per port with GTP-U encapsulation, reducing 5G core latency by 31% compared to previous-gen line cards.
Precision Time Protocol (PTP) synchronization at ±5ns accuracy enabled sub-microsecond arbitrage across 16 global exchanges using Cisco Crosswork Timing.
The line card’s EVPN Multi-Homing supported 10K+ small cells per router, reducing LTE/5G handover latency to 8ms in urban deployments.
Integrated with Cisco Nexus Dashboard, the card automated VXLAN bridging across 32 data centers, cutting provisioning time from days to minutes.
RDMA over Converged Ethernet (RoCEv2) achieved 98% utilization of 400G links during distributed PyTorch training on 512x NVIDIA H100 GPUs.
Critical limitations:
The line card employs Cisco’s Adaptive Power Scaling (APS), dynamically adjusting SerDes voltage based on link utilization:
“XR-1K4OR-732K9=” is available via ITMall.sale’s Cisco SP-certified inventory, with Cisco Services for SP providing 24/7 TAC support. Lead times range 8–12 weeks for pre-configured bundles with Cisco Crosswork Automation.
Critical maintenance practices:
The XR-1K4OR-732K9= exemplifies Cisco’s hardware prowess but exposes fundamental tensions in next-gen networks. While its 400G density and Silicon One integration deliver unmatched throughput, real-world deployments reveal operational gaps—particularly in software-defined control planes. The card’s dependency on Cisco Crosswork/Nexus Dashboard creates vendor lock-in that conflicts with open networking initiatives like SONiC. For service providers prioritizing performance over flexibility, this line card is transformative. For others, it risks becoming a high-cost component in fragmented multi-vendor architectures—underscoring the industry’s struggle to harmonize hardware innovation with open ecosystem collaboration.