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  2. Fibre Channel switch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibre_Channel_switch

    A special variety of a FC switch is the Fibre Channel Director, a switch meant to provide backbone infrastructure in a fabric usually featuring at least 128 ports and high-availability attributes, however the term is loose and varies among to manufacturers. [1] It does not differ from a switch in core FC protocol functionality.

  3. Fibre Channel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibre_Channel

    Fibre Channel director with SFP+ modules and LC optical fiber connectors with Optical Multimode 3 (OM3) fiber (aqua) Fibre Channel switches can be divided into two classes. These classes are not part of the standard, and the classification of every switch is a marketing decision of the manufacturer:

  4. Fibre to the office - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibre_to_the_Office

    Fiber to the office (FTTO) is an alternative cabling concept for local area network (LAN) network office environments. [1] It combines passive elements (fibre optic cabling, patch panels, splice boxes, connectors and standard copper 8P8C patch cords) and active mini-switches (called FTTO switches) to provide end devices with Gigabit Ethernet. [2]

  5. Fibre Channel over Ethernet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibre_Channel_over_Ethernet

    Mapping between Fibre Channel N_port IDs (aka FCIDs) and Ethernet MAC addresses. "Converged" network adapter. Computers can connect to FCoE with converged network adapters (CNAs), which contain both Fibre Channel host bus adapter (HBA) and Ethernet network interface controller (NIC) functionality on the same physical card. CNAs have one or more ...

  6. Network switch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_switch

    An Ethernet switch operates at the data link layer (layer 2) of the OSI model to create a separate collision domain for each switch port. Each device connected to a switch port can transfer data to any of the other ports at any time and the transmissions will not interfere.

  7. Fiber to the x - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiber_to_the_x

    Fiber to the x (FTTX; also spelled "fibre") or fiber in the loop is a generic term for any broadband network architecture using optical fiber to provide all or part of the local loop used for last mile telecommunications. As fiber optic cables are able to carry much more data than copper cables, especially over long distances, copper telephone ...

  8. Fiber Distributed Data Interface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiber_distributed_data...

    Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI) is a standard for data transmission in a local area network. It uses optical fiber as its standard underlying physical medium. It was also later specified to use copper cable, in which case it may be called CDDI (Copper Distributed Data Interface), standardized as TP-PMD (Twisted-Pair Physical Medium ...

  9. Fibre Channel Protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibre_Channel_Protocol

    The network infrastructure for carrying frame traffic between N_PORTs. Within a switched or mixed fabric, a set of auxiliary servers, including a name server for device discovery and network address resolution. Fibre Channel network topologies consist of the following: Arbitrated Loop—A series of N_PORTs connected together in daisy-chain fashion.