Appointment | internal |
Interface | PCI-E |
RJ-45 | |
SFP | |
Number of SFP ports | 2 |
Width | 69 mm |
Height | 18 mm |
Depth | 170 mm |
Type | network adapter |
Appointment | internal |
Interface | PCI-E |
RJ-45 | |
SFP | |
Number of SFP ports | 2 |
Operating temperature | -40°C - 60°C |
Width | 69 mm |
Height | 18 mm |
Depth | 170 mm |
Warranty | 12 months |
Width | 230 mm |
Height | 30 mm |
Length | 130 mm |
Weight | 0.30 kg |
Volume | 0.0009 m3 |
Save space in your server room by adding a real CCR2004.. within the server itself! This unique product combines a simple 2x 25 Gigabit PCIe Ethernet adapter with the impressive capabilities of a fully-fledged router.
To get this CCR device to work as an NIC, a new Passthrough mode was implemented. Basically, a FastForward FastPath mode that can also pass hardware link statuses.
This NIC can reach wire-speed (100Gbps) with Jumbo frames. It ensures that in most server setups this CCR network card will not be the bottleneck.
With 4 GB of RAM, 128 MB of NAND storage, and a powerful quad-core ARMv8 64-bit CPU, this device can handle a lot: firewalls, user management and access control for home media and file servers, and even some traffic control in data centers – without the need for a stand-alone router.
This form-factor does come with certain limitations that you should keep in mind. The CCR NIC card needs some time to boot up compared to ASIC-based setups. If the host system is up before the CCR card, it will not appear among the available devices. You should add a PCIe device initialization delay after power-up in the BIOS. Or you will need to re-initialize the PCIe devices from the HOST system.
We are looking forward to see your unique use-cases for this unconventional device: a simple high-speed networking card combined with a powerful Cloud Core Router.