Site icon Converge Digest

Cisco Debuts Four-slot CRS-1, 40 Gbps-Per-Slot Routing System

Cisco Systems introduced a compact version of its CRS-1 Carrier Routing System designed for deployment at regional Points of Presence (POPs), MSO hub locations and data center peering sites. The new platform is especially aimed at broadcast IPTV services and offers a multistage switch fabric with native multicast capabilities.

The four-slot CRS-1 joins the 16-slot platform (1.2 terabits-per-second (Tbps)) and the eight-slot platform (640 Gbps), all of which feature cross-slot-compatibility.

Key features of the Cisco CRS-1 include:

BT tested a four-slot single chassis CRS-1 Cisco CRS-1 earlier this year. In the test, three Secure Domain Routers (SDRs) were established in-service on a single CRS-1 multi-chassis system for broadcast TV, video-on-demand and core applications. The test showed support for 400,000 simultaneous unique multicast streams, and support for priority queuing and traffic shaping, protecting important video or VoIP traffic from increases in latency and packet loss caused by oversubscription in lower traffic classes.

The CRS-1 four-slot single-shelf system will be available in November. The starting system list price is US$160,000.

Cisco also announced a major new customer — KT has selected the CRS-1 for its KORNET backbone network. In addition, Sprint has been evaluating the CRS-1 since 2004 and will deploy it beginning in CYQ4 2006. National LambdaRail, a consortium of leading U.S. research universities and private sector technology companies, has been using the CRS-1 for more than a year and is evaluating the new four-slot platform.

http://www.cisco.com

Exit mobile version