Dell PowerConnect 7048P Hızlı başlangıç ​​Kılavuzu

Kategori
Ağ anahtarları
Tip
Hızlı başlangıç ​​Kılavuzu
Dell PowerConnect
7000 Series Switch
Getting Started Guide
使用入门指南
入門指南
Guide de mise en route
Handbuch zum Einstieg
Panduan Pengaktifan
はじめに
시작 안내서
Guía de introducción
Başlangıç Kılavuzu
Guia de Primeiros Passos
Regulatory models: PC7024, PC7024P,
PC7024F, PC7048, PC7048P, and PC7048R
Dell PowerConnect
7000 Series Switch
Getting Started Guide
Regulatory Models: PC7024, PC7024P,
PC7024F, PC7048, PC7048P, PC7048R,
and PC7048R-RA
Notes, Cautions, and Warnings
NOTE: A NOTE indicates important information that helps you make better use
of your computer.
CAUTION: A CAUTION indicates potential damage to hardware or loss of data
if instructions are not followed.
WARNING: A WARNING indicates a potential for property damage, personal
injury, or death.
____________________
Information in this publication is subject to change without notice.
© 2011 Dell Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction of these materials in any manner whatsoever without the written permission of Dell Inc.
is strictly forbidden.
Trademarks used in this text: Dell™, the DELL logo, PowerConnect™, and OpenManage™ are
trademarks of Dell Inc. Microsoft
®
, Windows
®
, Windows Server
®
, MS-DOS
®
and Windows Vista
®
are either trademarks or registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or
other countries.
Other trademarks and trade names may be used in this publication to refer to either the entities claiming
the marks and names or their products. Dell Inc. disclaims any proprietary interest in trademarks and
trade names other than its own.
Regulatory Models: PC7024, PC7024P, PC7024F, PC7048, PC7048P, PC7048R, and PC7048R-RA
March 2011 P/N D3R71 Rev. A00
Contents 3
Contents
1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
PowerConnect 7000 Series Overview . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2 Hardware Overview. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
PowerConnect 7000 Series Front Panel . . . . . . . . . . 6
Switch Ports
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Console Port
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Out-of-Band Management Port
. . . . . . . . . . 10
USB Port
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Reset Button
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Port and System LEDs
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Stack Master LED and Stack
Number Display
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
PowerConnect 7000 Series Back Panel
. . . . . . . . . 11
Expansion Slots for Plug-in Modules
. . . . . . . . 12
Power Supplies
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Ventilation System
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Locator LED
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4 Contents
3Installation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Site Preparation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Unpacking the Switch
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Package Contents
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Unpacking Steps
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Mounting the Switch
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Installing in a Rack
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Installing as a Free-standing Switch
. . . . . . . . 17
Stacking Multiple Switches
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Creating a Switch Stack
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
4 Starting and Configuring the Switch . . . 19
Connecting a Switch to a Terminal . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Connecting a Switch to a Power Supply
. . . . . . . . 22
AC and DC Power Connection
. . . . . . . . . . . 22
Booting the Switch
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Performing the Initial Configuration
. . . . . . . . . . . 23
Enabling Remote Management
. . . . . . . . . . . 24
Initial Configuration Procedure
. . . . . . . . . . . 24
Example Session
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Next Steps
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
5 PoE Power Budget . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Getting Started Guide 5
Introduction
This document provides basic information about the Dell PowerConnect
7000 Series switches, including how to install a switch and perform the initial
configuration. For information about how to configure and monitor switch
features, see the User’s Configuration Guide, which is available on your User
Documentation CD, or check the Dell Support website at support.dell.com
for the latest updates on documentation and firmware.
This document contains the following sections:
Hardware Overview
Installation
Starting and Configuring the Switch
PowerConnect 7000 Series Overview
The PowerConnect 7000 Series switches are stackable Layer 3 Gigabit
Ethernet switches and include the following six models:
PowerConnect 7024 (PC7024)
PowerConnect 7024P (PC7024P)
PowerConnect 7024F (PC7024F)
PowerConnect 7048 (PC7048)
PowerConnect 7048P (PC7048P)
PowerConnect 7048R (PC7048R/PC7048R-RA)
NOTE: The PowerConnect 7048R (PC7048R/PC7048R-RA) is a top-of-rack switch.
The difference between the PC7048R and PC7048R-RA models is the air-flow
direction.
6 Getting Started Guide
Hardware Overview
This section contains information about device characteristics and modular
hardware configurations for the PowerConnect 7000 Series switches.
All models are 1U, rack mountable switches with the following physical
dimensions:
440 x 460 x 44 mm (W x D x H).
17.3 x 18.1 x 1.7 inch (W x D x H).
PowerConnect 7000 Series Front Panel
The following images show the front panels of the six switch models in the
PowerConnect 7000 Series.
Figure 1-1. PowerConnect 7024 with 24 10/100/1000BASE-T Ports
Figure 1-2. PowerConnect 7024P with 24 10/100/1000BASE-T PoE Plus Ports
Combo Ports10/100/1000BASE-T Auto-sensing
Full Duplex RJ-45 Ports
Combo Ports10/100/1000BASE-T RJ-45 PoE Plus Ports
Providing up to 30W per Port
Getting Started Guide 7
Figure 1-3. PowerConnect 7024F with 24 SFP Ports
Figure 1-4. PowerConnect 7048 with 48 10/100/1000BASE-T Ports
Figure 1-5. PowerConnect 7048P with 48 10/100/1000BASE-T PoE Plus Ports
SFP Ports Combo Ports
Combo Ports10/100/1000BASE-T Auto-sensing
Full Duplex RJ-45 Ports
Combo Ports10/100/1000BASE-T RJ-45 PoE Plus Ports
Providing up to 30W per Port
8 Getting Started Guide
Figure 1-6. PowerConnect 7048R with 48 10/100/1000BASE-T Ports
In addition to the switch ports, the front panel of each model in the series
includes the following ports:
Console port
Out-of-band management port
USB port
The additional ports are on the right side of the front panel.
Figure 1-7. Additional PowerConnect 7000 Series Ports
Combo Ports
10/100/1000BASE-T Auto-sensing
Full Duplex RJ-45 Ports
Combo Ports
Reset Button
USB Port
Console Port Out-of-Band Management Port
Getting Started Guide 9
The front panel also contains a reset button (pinhole) and several status
LEDs.
NOTE: The port LEDs and system LEDs on the front panel are not the same for all
models. Figure 1-7 shows the LEDs on the PowerConnect 7024, PowerConnect
7024F, and PowerConnect 7048 switches.
Switch Ports
The PowerConnect 7024 and PowerConnect 7024P front panel provides
24 Gigabit Ethernet (10/100/1000BASE-T) RJ-45 ports with four SFP combo
ports that have an auto-sensing mode for speed, flow control, and duplex
mode. SFP transceivers are sold separately. The PowerConnect 7024P switch
ports are IEEE 802.3at-2009-compliant (PoE Plus) and can provided up to
30W of power per port.
The PowerConnect 7024F front panel provides 20 Gigabit Ethernet
(10/100/1000BASE-FX) SFP ports plus 4 combo ports for copper or SFP
media support.
The PowerConnect 7048, PowerConnect 7048P, and PowerConnect 7048R
front panel provides 48 Gigabit Ethernet (10/100/1000BASE-T) RJ-45 ports
with four SFP combo ports. The PowerConnect 7048P switch ports are
IEEE 802.3at-2009-compliant (PoE Plus) and can provided up to 30W of
power per port.
The front-panel switch ports have the following characteristics:
The switch automatically detects the difference between crossed and
straight-through cables on RJ-45 ports.
SFP ports support both SX and LX modules.
RJ-45 ports support half- and full-duplex mode 10/100/1000 Mbps.
Console Port
The console port is for management through a serial interface. This port
provides a direct connection to the switch and allows you to access the CLI
from a console terminal connected to the port through the provided serial
cable (RJ-45 to female DB-9 connectors).
The console port supports asynchronous data of eight data bits, one stop bit, no
parity bit, and no flow control. The default baud rate is 9600 bps.
10 Getting Started Guide
Out-of-Band Management Port
The Out-of-Band (OOB) management port is a 10/100/1000BASE-T
Ethernet port dedicated to remote switch management. Traffic on this port is
segregated from operational network traffic on the switch ports and cannot be
switched or routed to the operational network.
USB Port
The Type-A, female USB port supports a USB 2.0-compliant flash memory
drive. The PowerConnect switch can read or write to a flash drive formatted
as FAT-32. You can use a USB flash drive to copy switch configuration files
and images between the USB flash drive and the switch. You can also use the
USB flash drive to move and copy configuration files and images from one
switch to other switches in the network.
The USB port does not support any other type of USB device.
Reset Button
The reset button is accessed through the pinhole and allows you to perform a
hard reset on the switch. To use the reset button, insert an unbent paper clip
or similar tool into the pinhole. When the switch completes the boot process
after the reset, it resumes operation with the most recently saved
configuration. Any changes made to the running configuration that were not
saved to the startup configuration prior to the reset are lost.
Port and System LEDs
The front panel contains light emitting diodes (LEDs) that indicate the
status of port links, power supplies, fans, stacking, and the overall system.
Additionally, the PowerConnect 7024P and PowerConnect 7048P switches
contain LEDs that provide information about Power over Ethernet Plus
(PoE+) status and activity on the ports.
For information about the status that the LEDs indicate, see the User’s
Configuration Guide.
Getting Started Guide 11
Stack Master LED and Stack Number Display
When a switch within a stack is the master unit, the stack master LED, which
is labeled M, is solid green. If the M LED is off, the stack member is not the
master unit. The Stack No. panel displays the unit number for the stack
member. If a switch is not part of a stack, the M LED is illuminated and the
stack unit number is 1.
PowerConnect 7000 Series Back Panel
The following images show the back panel of the PowerConnect 7000 Series
switches.
Figure 1-8. PC7024, PC7024F, and PC7048 Back Panel
Figure 1-9. PC7024P and PC7048P Back Panel
Dual 10G Slots for SFP+, 10GBASE-T,
or Stacking/10GbE Modules
AC Power
Receptacle
Redundant DC Power
Supply Receptacle
Fan Vents
AC Power
Receptacle
External DC Power
Supply Receptacle
Fan Vents
Dual 10G Slots for SFP+, 10GBASE-T,
or Stacking/10 GbE Modules
12 Getting Started Guide
Figure 1-10. PC7048R Back Panel
Expansion Slots for Plug-in Modules
Two expansion slots are located on the back of the switch and can support the
following modules:
10GBASE-T module
SFP+ module
Stacking/10 GbE module
Each plug-in module has two ports. The Stacking/10GbE modules can be
configured to operate as either 16-Gigabit stacking ports or 10-Gigabit
Ethernet switch ports. The plug-in modules include hot-swap support, so you
do not need to reboot the switch after you install a new module.
Power Supplies
PC7024 and PC7024F
PowerConnect 7024 and PowerConnect 7024F switches have an internal
180-watt power supply. The additional external power supply (PowerConnect
RPS720) provides 180 watts of power and gives full redundancy for the
switch.
PC7024P
PowerConnect 7024P switches have an internal 1000-watt power supply.
The additional external power supply (PowerConnect MPS1000) provides
1000 Watts and gives full redundancy for the switch.
AC Power
Receptacle
Fan Trays
AC Power
Receptacle
Dual 10G Slots for SFP+, 10GBASE-T,
or Stacking/10GbE Modules
Getting Started Guide 13
PC7048
PowerConnect 7048 switches have an internal 180-watt power supply.
The additional external power supply (PowerConnect RPS720) provides
180 watts and gives full redundancy for the switch.
PC7048P
PowerConnect 7048P switches have an internal 1000-watt power supply
which can support up to 24 ports of PoE. The additional external power
supply (PowerConnect MPS1000) allows all 48 ports of PoE, or 24 ports of
PoE and full redundancy for the switch.
PC7048R and PC7048R-RA
PowerConnect 7048R and PowerConnect 7048R-RA switches are designed as
top-of-rack switches and include two internal, replaceable, AC power supplies
for redundant or load-sharing operation. Each power supply can provide
300 watts and includes hot-swap support. This means you do not need to
power-down the switch to remove or replace one power supply while the other
power supply is operating normally. However, it is necessary to remove power
from the power supply that is being removed or replaced.
CAUTION: Remove the power cable from the modules prior to removing the
module itself. Power must not be connected prior to insertion in the chassis.
Ventilation System
Three fans cool the PowerConnect 7024, PowerConnect 7024F, and
PowerConnect 7048. The PowerConnect 7024P and PowerConnect 7048P
each have two fans, with a third fan in the internal power supply.
The PowerConnect 7048R has two hot-swappable fan trays with one fan each.
Locator LED
The back panel includes an LED to help identify the switch within a rack or
room full of switches. From your remote management system, you can set the
LED to blink to help you or a local technician identify the physical location of
the switch.
14 Getting Started Guide
Installation
Site Preparation
PowerConnect 7000 Series switches can be mounted in a standard 48.26-cm
(19-inch) rack or left freestanding (placed on a flat surface) and function as
stand-alone switches.
Before installing the switch or switches, make sure that the chosen
installation location meets the following site requirements:
Power
— The switch is installed near an easily accessible 100–240 VAC,
50–60 Hz outlet.
Clearance
— There is adequate front and rear clearance for operator
access. Allow clearance for cabling, power connections, and ventilation.
Cabling
— The cabling is routed to avoid sources of electrical noise such
as radio transmitters, broadcast amplifiers, power lines, and fluorescent
lighting fixtures.
Ambient Temperature
— The ambient switch operating temperature
range is 0 to 45ºC (32 to 113ºF) at a relative humidity of up to 95 percent,
non-condensing.
Unpacking the Switch
Package Contents
When unpacking each switch, make sure that the following items are
included:
One PowerConnect switch
One AC power cable (two AC power cables for the PowerConnect 7048R)
One RJ-45 to DB-9 female cable
One rack-mount kit for rack installation (two mounting brackets, bolts,
and cage nuts)
One set of self-adhesive rubber pads for the free-standing switch (four pads
are included)
User Documentation
CD
Getting Started Guide 15
Getting Started Guide
Safety and Regulatory Information
Warranty and Support Information
Software License Agreement
Unpacking Steps
NOTE: Before unpacking the switch, inspect the container and immediately report
any evidence of damage.
1
Place the container on a clean, flat surface and cut all straps securing the
container.
2
Open the container or remove the container top.
3
Carefully remove the switch from the container and place it on a secure
and clean surface.
4
Remove all packing material.
5
Inspect the product and accessories for damage.
Mounting the Switch
WARNING: Read the safety information in the Safety and Regulatory Information
as well as the safety information for other switches that connect to or support the
switch.
The AC power connector is on the back panel of the switch.
Installing in a Rack
WARNING: Do not use rack mounting kits to suspend the switch from under a
table or desk, or attach it to a wall.
CAUTION: Disconnect all cables from the switch before continuing. Remove all
self-adhesive pads from the underside of the switch, if they have been attached.
CAUTION: When mounting multiple switches into a rack, mount the switches
from the bottom up.
1
Place the supplied rack-mounting bracket on one side of the switch,
ensuring that the mounting holes on the switch line up to the mounting
holes in the rack-mounting bracket. Figure 1-11 illustrates where to mount
the brackets.
16 Getting Started Guide
Figure 1-11. Attaching the Brackets
2
Insert the supplied bolts into the rack-mounting holes and tighten with a
screwdriver.
3
Repeat the process for the rack-mounting bracket on the other side of the
switch.
4
Insert the switch into the 48.26 cm (19 inch) rack, ensuring that the rack-
mounting holes on the switch line up to the mounting holes in the rack.
5
Secure the switch to the rack with either the rack bolts or cage nuts and
cage-nut bolts with washers (depending on the kind of rack you have).
Fasten the bolts on bottom before fastening the bolts on top.
CAUTION: Make sure that the supplied rack bolts fit the pre-threaded holes in the
rack.
NOTE: Make sure that the ventilation holes are not obstructed.
Getting Started Guide 17
Installing as a Free-standing Switch
NOTE: We strongly recommend mounting the switch in a rack.
Install the switch on a flat surface if you are not installing it in a rack.
The surface must be able to support the weight of the switch and the switch
cables. The switch is supplied with four self-adhesive rubber pads.
1
Attach the self-adhesive rubber pads on each location marked on the
bottom of the switch.
2
Set the switch on a flat surface, and make sure that it has proper
ventilation by leaving 5 cm (2 inches) on each side and 13 cm (5 inches) at
the back.
Stacking Multiple Switches
You can stack PowerConnect PowerConnect 7000 Series switches up to
12 switches high, supporting up to 576 front panel ports. When multiple
switches are connected together through the stack ports, they operate as a
single unit with a larger port count. The stack operates and is managed as a
single entity.
NOTE: If you are installing a stack of switches, you need to assemble and cable the
stack before powering up and configuring it. When a stack is powered up for the
first time, the switches elect a Master Switch, which may occupy any location in
the stack. The Master LED on the front panel is illuminated on the master unit.
Creating a Switch Stack
Create a stack by connecting adjacent units using the stacking ports on the
back panel of the switch. Stacking modules are sold separately. Figure 1-12
shows the switches connected in a ring topology, which is the recommended
topology for a stack.
1
Install a separately purchased stacking module in one of the rear expansion
slots for each of the switches in the stack.
2
Connect one of the short stacking cables into either of the stacking ports
of the top switch and the switch directly below it.
If necessary, use a separately purchased, long (3 meter) stacking cable to
connect the switches.
18 Getting Started Guide
3
Repeat this process until all of the devices are connected.
4
Use the remaining stacking cable to connect the remaining free ports,
one each on the top and bottom switches.
Figure 1-12. Connecting a Stack of Switches
The stack in Figure 1-12 is connected in a ring topology and has the following
physical connections between the switches:
The XG1 port on Unit 1 is connected to the XG2 port on Unit 2.
The XG1 port on Unit 2 is connected to the XG4 port on Unit 3.
The XG3 port on Unit 3 is connected to the XG2 port on Unit 1.
Stacking Standby
The stacking feature supports a Standby or backup unit that assumes the
Master unit role if the Master unit in the stack fails. As soon as a Master
failure is detected in the stack, the Standby unit initializes the control plane
and enables all other stack units with the current configuration. The Standby
unit maintains a synchronized copy of the running configuration for the
stack. During switchover, all the ports are brought down and brought up to
avoid possible loops and to get new master software applications to a
consistent state.
The Standby unit is pre-configured in the stack; however, you can use the CLI
to select a different stack member as Standby. See the User’s Configuration
Guide or the CLI Reference Guide for more information.
Unit 1
Unit 2
Unit 3
XG1 Port XG2 Port
  • Page 1 1
  • Page 2 2
  • Page 3 3
  • Page 4 4
  • Page 5 5
  • Page 6 6
  • Page 7 7
  • Page 8 8
  • Page 9 9
  • Page 10 10
  • Page 11 11
  • Page 12 12
  • Page 13 13
  • Page 14 14
  • Page 15 15
  • Page 16 16
  • Page 17 17
  • Page 18 18
  • Page 19 19
  • Page 20 20
  • Page 21 21
  • Page 22 22
  • Page 23 23
  • Page 24 24
  • Page 25 25
  • Page 26 26
  • Page 27 27
  • Page 28 28
  • Page 29 29
  • Page 30 30
  • Page 31 31
  • Page 32 32
  • Page 33 33
  • Page 34 34
  • Page 35 35
  • Page 36 36
  • Page 37 37
  • Page 38 38
  • Page 39 39
  • Page 40 40
  • Page 41 41
  • Page 42 42
  • Page 43 43
  • Page 44 44
  • Page 45 45
  • Page 46 46
  • Page 47 47
  • Page 48 48
  • Page 49 49
  • Page 50 50
  • Page 51 51
  • Page 52 52
  • Page 53 53
  • Page 54 54
  • Page 55 55
  • Page 56 56
  • Page 57 57
  • Page 58 58
  • Page 59 59
  • Page 60 60
  • Page 61 61
  • Page 62 62
  • Page 63 63
  • Page 64 64
  • Page 65 65
  • Page 66 66
  • Page 67 67
  • Page 68 68
  • Page 69 69
  • Page 70 70
  • Page 71 71
  • Page 72 72
  • Page 73 73
  • Page 74 74
  • Page 75 75
  • Page 76 76
  • Page 77 77
  • Page 78 78
  • Page 79 79
  • Page 80 80
  • Page 81 81
  • Page 82 82
  • Page 83 83
  • Page 84 84
  • Page 85 85
  • Page 86 86
  • Page 87 87
  • Page 88 88
  • Page 89 89
  • Page 90 90
  • Page 91 91
  • Page 92 92
  • Page 93 93
  • Page 94 94
  • Page 95 95
  • Page 96 96
  • Page 97 97
  • Page 98 98
  • Page 99 99
  • Page 100 100
  • Page 101 101
  • Page 102 102
  • Page 103 103
  • Page 104 104
  • Page 105 105
  • Page 106 106
  • Page 107 107
  • Page 108 108
  • Page 109 109
  • Page 110 110
  • Page 111 111
  • Page 112 112
  • Page 113 113
  • Page 114 114
  • Page 115 115
  • Page 116 116
  • Page 117 117
  • Page 118 118
  • Page 119 119
  • Page 120 120
  • Page 121 121
  • Page 122 122
  • Page 123 123
  • Page 124 124
  • Page 125 125
  • Page 126 126
  • Page 127 127
  • Page 128 128
  • Page 129 129
  • Page 130 130
  • Page 131 131
  • Page 132 132
  • Page 133 133
  • Page 134 134
  • Page 135 135
  • Page 136 136
  • Page 137 137
  • Page 138 138
  • Page 139 139
  • Page 140 140
  • Page 141 141
  • Page 142 142
  • Page 143 143
  • Page 144 144
  • Page 145 145
  • Page 146 146
  • Page 147 147
  • Page 148 148
  • Page 149 149
  • Page 150 150
  • Page 151 151
  • Page 152 152
  • Page 153 153
  • Page 154 154
  • Page 155 155
  • Page 156 156
  • Page 157 157
  • Page 158 158
  • Page 159 159
  • Page 160 160
  • Page 161 161
  • Page 162 162
  • Page 163 163
  • Page 164 164
  • Page 165 165
  • Page 166 166
  • Page 167 167
  • Page 168 168
  • Page 169 169
  • Page 170 170
  • Page 171 171
  • Page 172 172
  • Page 173 173
  • Page 174 174
  • Page 175 175
  • Page 176 176
  • Page 177 177
  • Page 178 178
  • Page 179 179
  • Page 180 180
  • Page 181 181
  • Page 182 182
  • Page 183 183
  • Page 184 184
  • Page 185 185
  • Page 186 186
  • Page 187 187
  • Page 188 188
  • Page 189 189
  • Page 190 190
  • Page 191 191
  • Page 192 192
  • Page 193 193
  • Page 194 194
  • Page 195 195
  • Page 196 196
  • Page 197 197
  • Page 198 198
  • Page 199 199
  • Page 200 200
  • Page 201 201
  • Page 202 202
  • Page 203 203
  • Page 204 204
  • Page 205 205
  • Page 206 206
  • Page 207 207
  • Page 208 208
  • Page 209 209
  • Page 210 210
  • Page 211 211
  • Page 212 212
  • Page 213 213
  • Page 214 214
  • Page 215 215
  • Page 216 216
  • Page 217 217
  • Page 218 218
  • Page 219 219
  • Page 220 220
  • Page 221 221
  • Page 222 222
  • Page 223 223
  • Page 224 224
  • Page 225 225
  • Page 226 226
  • Page 227 227
  • Page 228 228
  • Page 229 229
  • Page 230 230
  • Page 231 231
  • Page 232 232
  • Page 233 233
  • Page 234 234
  • Page 235 235
  • Page 236 236
  • Page 237 237
  • Page 238 238
  • Page 239 239
  • Page 240 240
  • Page 241 241
  • Page 242 242
  • Page 243 243
  • Page 244 244
  • Page 245 245
  • Page 246 246
  • Page 247 247
  • Page 248 248
  • Page 249 249
  • Page 250 250
  • Page 251 251
  • Page 252 252
  • Page 253 253
  • Page 254 254
  • Page 255 255
  • Page 256 256
  • Page 257 257
  • Page 258 258
  • Page 259 259
  • Page 260 260
  • Page 261 261
  • Page 262 262
  • Page 263 263
  • Page 264 264
  • Page 265 265
  • Page 266 266
  • Page 267 267
  • Page 268 268
  • Page 269 269
  • Page 270 270
  • Page 271 271
  • Page 272 272
  • Page 273 273
  • Page 274 274
  • Page 275 275
  • Page 276 276
  • Page 277 277
  • Page 278 278
  • Page 279 279
  • Page 280 280
  • Page 281 281
  • Page 282 282
  • Page 283 283
  • Page 284 284
  • Page 285 285
  • Page 286 286
  • Page 287 287
  • Page 288 288
  • Page 289 289
  • Page 290 290
  • Page 291 291
  • Page 292 292
  • Page 293 293
  • Page 294 294
  • Page 295 295
  • Page 296 296
  • Page 297 297
  • Page 298 298
  • Page 299 299
  • Page 300 300
  • Page 301 301
  • Page 302 302
  • Page 303 303
  • Page 304 304
  • Page 305 305
  • Page 306 306
  • Page 307 307
  • Page 308 308
  • Page 309 309
  • Page 310 310
  • Page 311 311
  • Page 312 312
  • Page 313 313
  • Page 314 314
  • Page 315 315
  • Page 316 316
  • Page 317 317
  • Page 318 318
  • Page 319 319
  • Page 320 320
  • Page 321 321
  • Page 322 322
  • Page 323 323
  • Page 324 324
  • Page 325 325
  • Page 326 326
  • Page 327 327
  • Page 328 328
  • Page 329 329
  • Page 330 330
  • Page 331 331
  • Page 332 332
  • Page 333 333
  • Page 334 334
  • Page 335 335
  • Page 336 336
  • Page 337 337
  • Page 338 338
  • Page 339 339
  • Page 340 340
  • Page 341 341
  • Page 342 342
  • Page 343 343
  • Page 344 344
  • Page 345 345
  • Page 346 346
  • Page 347 347
  • Page 348 348
  • Page 349 349
  • Page 350 350
  • Page 351 351
  • Page 352 352
  • Page 353 353
  • Page 354 354
  • Page 355 355
  • Page 356 356
  • Page 357 357
  • Page 358 358
  • Page 359 359
  • Page 360 360
  • Page 361 361
  • Page 362 362
  • Page 363 363
  • Page 364 364
  • Page 365 365
  • Page 366 366
  • Page 367 367
  • Page 368 368
  • Page 369 369
  • Page 370 370
  • Page 371 371
  • Page 372 372
  • Page 373 373
  • Page 374 374
  • Page 375 375
  • Page 376 376
  • Page 377 377
  • Page 378 378
  • Page 379 379
  • Page 380 380
  • Page 381 381
  • Page 382 382
  • Page 383 383
  • Page 384 384
  • Page 385 385
  • Page 386 386
  • Page 387 387
  • Page 388 388
  • Page 389 389
  • Page 390 390
  • Page 391 391
  • Page 392 392
  • Page 393 393
  • Page 394 394
  • Page 395 395
  • Page 396 396
  • Page 397 397
  • Page 398 398
  • Page 399 399
  • Page 400 400
  • Page 401 401
  • Page 402 402

Dell PowerConnect 7048P Hızlı başlangıç ​​Kılavuzu

Kategori
Ağ anahtarları
Tip
Hızlı başlangıç ​​Kılavuzu