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The Cisco Nexus® 9000 Series Switches are industry-leading data center switches designed to cater to the needs for modern-day data centers. The Nexus 9000 family offers a wide range of switches built using both merchant and custom Cisco® ASICs.
Cisco Cloud Scale is a family of ASICs, developed in-house by Cisco, that power the latest generation of Nexus 9000 switches.
The Cloud Scale Nexus 9000 product family consists of both Nexus 9300 series fixed form-factor and Nexus 9500 series modular switches.
Some of the key highlights of Cloud Scale ASICs are as listed below:
● Ultra-high port densities
● Multi-speed – from 100 Mbps to 400 Gbps
● Rich feature-set
● Flexible forwarding scale
● Intelligent buffering
● Built-in analytics and telemetry
Flexibility with Cisco Cloud Scale ASIC
Cisco Nexus 9000 switches power data centers across a variety of verticals – be it enterprise, financials, universities, media and entertainment, or service providers. Depending on the use case, the requirements when it comes to scale could change. Network deployment within an enterprise data center typically requires a large host route scale, a service provider using the Nexus 9000 as an internet peering edge requires a large prefix scale or for customers in financials and media and entertainment, who are multicast heavy, require a large multicast route scale. The Cloud Scale ASIC forwarding table allows the capability to resize the forwarding table based on the requirements driven by the use cases.
Cloud Scale ASIC forwarding block
The most important component of the switch is its ASIC. The ASIC is a custom-built chip designed to perform a specific function. In the case of a switch, this ASIC is designed to perform packet forwarding operations, which are switching and routing.
To perform forwarding lookup operations, ASICs have the following building blocks:
● MAC layer – responsible for transmitting and receiving the packets to and from the wire
● Parser – determines if a particular frame/packet should be L2 or L3 processed
● Forwarding engine – determines, based on the frame/packet header, what egress port this frame/packet should exit through
● Forwarding table – stores various forwarding tables such as MAC, ARP, IPv4/V6 route tables, etc., which are consumed by the forwarding engine to make forwarding decisions
● Classification TCAM – mainly used to store ACL and QoS policies
● Buffer – reserved memory space to store the packet during congestion
The following table shows the Cisco Nexus 9300 Cloud Scale family switches and their ASICs:
Table 1. Nexus 9000 Cloud Scale models and ASICs
Cisco Nexus 9000 Cloud Scale ASICs are further divided into slices. A slice is a self-contained forwarding block controlling a subset of ports on the ASIC. Additionally, each slice has its own dedicated resources (discussed above) to perform packet forwarding.
The idea behind implementing a slice is to build multiple parallel forwarding pipelines to achieve greater throughput. Hence a slice is a switch in itself and therefore is called an SoC (a “switch on chip”).
Depending on the ASIC form factor, the number of slices in an ASIC varies.
Cloud Scale ASICs
Forwarding resources such as TCAM, buffer, etc., are assigned to the slices. Each slice has its own dedicated TCAM and buffer resources that are not shared with any other slices on the same ASIC.
Cloud Scale ASIC forwarding block
In Cloud Scale ASICs, the forwarding information is stored in two different resources:
● Forwarding TCAM
● Flexible tiles
Note: Forwarding TCAM is NOT used for classification ACLs. That is a separate resource ACL/QoS TCAM.
Forwarding TCAM
TCAM memory, front-ending flexible forwarding lookups
● Handles overflow/hash collisions
● Divided into smaller portions called banks (usually 1K in size)
Flexible forwarding TCAM (flex tiles)
Provide fungible pool of table entries for lookups
Variety of functions, including:
● IPv4/IPv6 unicast longest-prefix match (LPM)
● IPv4/IPv6 unicast host-route table (HRT)
● IPv4/IPv6 multicast (*,G) and (S,G)
● MAC address table / adjacency table
● ECMP tables
● ACI policy
Forwarding TCAM and Flex tiles
Majority of forwarding lookup tables are programmed in flex tiles.
The size of the forwarding TCAM varies based on the ASIC and hence the number of banks and tiles. The following table shows the forwarding TCAM and flex tiles size per slice:
Table 2. ASICs and TCAM
ASIC |
No. of slices |
Forwarding TCAM |
Flex tiles |
LS1800 EX |
2 |
8 x 2K |
68 x 8K |
LS1800 FX |
1 |
16 x 1K |
136 x 8K |
LS3600 FX2 |
2 |
24 x 1K |
68 x 8K |
LS1800 FX3 |
1 |
24 x 1K |
136 x 8K |
LS6400 GX |
4 |
24 x 1K |
136 x 8K |
S 6400 |
4 |
16 x 1K |
44 x 8K |
Depending on the routing mode (we call it the routing template) that is configured, flex tiles are carved out and allocated to various forwarding tables. This provides flexibility to increase and decrease the various table sizes per use case.
Cisco NX-OS offers predefined routing templates that can be used depending on requirements.
Once these templates are applied, it applies to all the slices on the device.
As of now, NX-OS does not offer user-defined templates. Also, only one template can be applied to the device at any time.
Table 3. Routing templates
Routing template |
Description |
Dual-stack host scale |
Maximizes ARP/ND scale Increases the ARP/ND scale to double the default mode value. No IPv4/IPv6 LPM routes No Mcast |
Internet peering |
Maximizes IPv4/IPv6 LPM table To support IPv4/IPv6 Internet scale routing table Decreases ARP, ND, host route, Mac table No Mcast |
L2 heavy |
Maximizes Mac-address table scale 200K Decreases IPV4/IPv6 LPM routes No Mcast |
LPM heavy |
Maximizes IPv4/IPv6 LPM scale Decreases Mac, host route, ARP and ND tables |
MPLS heavy scale |
Maximizes MPLS table scale and ECMP MPLS table and ECPM groups are increased Decreases ARP, ND, host route, Mac table No Mcast |
Multicast extended heavy scale |
Increases IPv4/lPv6 Mcast table Reduction in IPv4/IPv6 LPM, ARP,ND and Mac tables |
Multicast heavy scale |
To further increase IPv4 Mcast table |
Nexus 9000 routing template for Cloud Scale
Not all these templates are supported on all platforms and NX-OS software versions. The following table shows the routing templates supported on various Nexus 9000 Cloud Scale ASICs running Cisco NX-OS Release 9.3(5):
Table 4. Routing template support matrix
|
TOR |
EOR |
|||||||
ASIC |
EX |
FX |
FX2 |
FX3 |
GX |
S 6400 |
EX |
FX |
|
Routing template |
|||||||||
Default |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
|
LPM heavy |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
|
L2 heavy |
✓ |
X |
X |
X |
✓ |
X |
X |
X |
|
L3 heavy |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
|
L3 Scale |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
|
Internet peering |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
X |
✓ |
✓ |
|
Dual-stack host scale |
X |
X |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
|
Dual-stack Mcast |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
|
MPLS scale |
X |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
|
Mcast heavy |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
|
Mcast ext heavy |
X |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
X |
X |
X |
|
Service provider |
X |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
X |
X |
✓ |
✓ |
|
Verified scale on different ASICs for fixed platforms
Table 5. Forwarding scale on LS1800 EX
LS1800 EX |
||||||||||
|
MAC |
IPv4 LPM |
IPv6 LPM |
Host routes (v4/v6) |
ARP |
ND |
IPv4 Mcast |
IPv6 Mcast |
MPLS label (without ECMP) |
MPLS label (with ECMP) |
Default |
98304 |
458752 |
206438 |
65536 |
49152 |
32768 |
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
LPM heavy |
32768 |
786432 |
353894 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
L2 heavy |
212992 |
196608 |
88473 |
65536 |
49152 |
32768 |
0 |
0 |
1000 |
500 |
L3 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 scale |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Internet peering |
40960 |
1000448 |
500224 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
0 |
0 |
1000 |
500 |
Dual-stack host scale |
114688 |
|
|
262144 |
98304 |
98304 |
0 |
0 |
1000 |
500 |
MPLS scale |
90112 |
471859 |
265420 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
0 |
0 |
4000 |
2000 |
Mcast heavy |
16384 |
589824 |
265420 |
49152 |
32768 |
24576 |
32768 |
8192 |
2000 |
1000 |
Mcast ext heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Service provider |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Table 6. Forwarding scale on LS1800 FX
LS1800 FX |
||||||||||
|
MAC |
IPv4 LPM |
IPv6 LPM |
Host routes (v4/v6) |
ARP |
ND |
IPv4 Mcast |
IPv6 Mcast |
MPLS label (without ECMP) |
MPLS label (with ECMP) |
Default |
114688 |
1153433 |
628224 |
196608 |
98304 |
98304 |
32768 |
8192 |
4000 |
2000 |
LPM heavy |
32768 |
786432 |
442368 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
L2 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 scale |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Internet peering |
16384 |
1256448 |
628224 |
98304 |
32768 |
32768 |
0 |
0 |
1000 |
500 |
Dual-stack host scale |
106496 |
|
|
262144 |
98304 |
98304 |
0 |
0 |
1000 |
500 |
MPLS scale |
90112 |
471859 |
265420 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
0 |
0 |
4000 |
2000 |
Mcast heavy |
16384 |
471859 |
265420 |
49152 |
32768 |
24576 |
32768 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
Mcast ext heavy |
32768 |
104857 |
58982 |
163840 |
32768 |
32768 |
131072 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
Service provider |
65536 |
629145 |
353894 |
65536 |
49152 |
32768 |
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
Table 7. Forwarding scale on LS3600 FX2
LS3600 FX2 |
||||||||||
|
MAC |
IPv4 LPM |
IPv6 LPM |
Host routes (v4/v6) |
ARP |
ND |
IPv4 Mcast |
IPv6 Mcast |
MPLS label (without ECMP) |
MPLS label (with ECMP) |
Default |
98304 |
524288 |
294912 |
65536 |
49152 |
32768 |
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
LPM heavy |
32768 |
786432 |
442368 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
L2 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 scale |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Internet peering |
40960 |
1000448 |
500224 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
0 |
0 |
1000 |
500 |
Dual-stack host scale |
106496 |
|
|
327680 |
98304 |
98304 |
0 |
0 |
1000 |
500 |
MPLS scale |
49152 |
576716 |
324403 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
0 |
0 |
4000 |
2000 |
Mcast heavy |
32768 |
471859 |
265420 |
49152 |
32768 |
24576 |
32768 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
Mcast ext heavy |
32768 |
104857 |
58982 |
163840 |
32768 |
32768 |
131072 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
Service provider |
65536 |
629145 |
353894 |
65536 |
49152 |
32768 |
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
Table 8. Forwarding scale on LS1800 FX3
LS1800 FX3 |
||||||||||
|
MAC |
IPv4 LPM |
IPv6 LPM |
Host routes (v4/v6) |
ARP |
ND |
IPv4 Mcast |
IPv6 Mcast |
MPLS label (without ECMP) |
MPLS label (with ECMP) |
Default |
114688 |
1048576 |
589824 |
196608 |
98304 |
98304 |
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
LPM heavy |
32768 |
786432 |
442368 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
L2 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 scale |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Internet peering |
16384 |
1256448 |
628224 |
98304 |
32768 |
32768 |
0 |
0 |
1000 |
500 |
Dual-stack host scale |
106496 |
|
|
327680 |
98304 |
98304 |
0 |
0 |
1000 |
500 |
MPLS scale |
49152 |
576716 |
324403 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
0 |
0 |
4000 |
2000 |
Mcast heavy |
32768 |
471859 |
265420 |
49152 |
32768 |
24576 |
32768 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
Mcast ext heavy |
32768 |
104857 |
58982 |
163840 |
32768 |
32768 |
131072 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
Service provider |
65536 |
629145 |
353894 |
65536 |
49152 |
32768 |
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
Table 9. Forwarding scale on LS6400 GX
LS6400 GX |
||||||||||
|
MAC |
IPv4 LPM |
IPv6 LPM |
Host routes (v4/v6) |
ARP |
ND |
IPv4 Mcast |
IPv6 Mcast |
MPLS label (without ECMP) |
MPLS label (with ECMP) |
Default |
114688 |
1153433 |
628224 |
196608 |
98304 |
98304 |
32768 |
8192 |
4000 |
2000 |
LPM heavy |
32768 |
786432 |
442368 |
32768 |
32768 |
32768 |
8192 |
2048 |
4000 |
2000 |
L2 heavy |
212992 |
314572 |
176947 |
65536 |
49152 |
32768 |
0 |
0 |
4000 |
2000 |
L3 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 scale |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Internet peering |
16384 |
1256448 |
628224 |
98304 |
32768 |
32768 |
0 |
0 |
4000 |
2000 |
Dual-stack host scale |
106496 |
|
|
327680 |
98304 |
98304 |
0 |
0 |
4000 |
2000 |
MPLS scale |
106496 |
681574 |
383385 |
196608 |
196608 |
98304 |
0 |
0 |
4000 |
2000 |
Mcast heavy |
32768 |
419430 |
235929 |
65536 |
32768 |
32768 |
32768 |
8192 |
4000 |
2000 |
Mcast ext heavy |
32768 |
104857 |
58982 |
163840 |
32768 |
32768 |
131072 |
8192 |
4000 |
2000 |
Service provider |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Table 10. Forwarding scale on S6400
S6400 |
||||||||||
|
MAC |
IPv4 LPM |
IPv6 LPM |
Host routes (v4/v6) |
ARP |
ND |
IPv4 Mcast |
IPv6 Mcast |
MPLS label (without ECMP) |
MPLS label (with ECMP) |
Default |
32768 |
131072 |
65536 |
65536 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
LPM heavy |
32768 |
262144 |
131072 |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
L2 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 scale |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Internet peering |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dual-stack host scale |
49152 |
|
|
163840 |
65536 |
65536 |
0 |
0 |
1000 |
500 |
MPLS scale |
32768 |
|
|
98304 |
90112 |
49152 |
0 |
0 |
4000 |
2000 |
Mcast heavy |
49152 |
|
|
98304 |
32768 |
32768 |
32768 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
Mcast ext heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Service provider |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note: All these scales are as per Cisco NX-OS Release 9.3(5).
Verified scale on different ASICs for modular platforms
Cisco Nexus 9500 Series Switches use a distributed forwarding architecture, where forwarding tables are distributed between line cards and fabric modules (mostly IPv6 tables are programmed on FMs).
Table 11. Forwarding scale on EX linecard
EX |
|||||||||||||
|
|
MAC |
IPv4 Trie |
IPv6 Trie |
IPV4 Host routes |
IPV6 Host routes |
ARP |
ND |
IPv4 Mcast |
IPv6 Mcast |
MPLS label (without ECMP) |
MPLS label (with ECMP) |
ECMP Groups |
Default |
LC |
98304 |
589824 |
|
65536 |
|
49152 |
|
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
176947 |
|
32768 |
|
32768 |
|
2048 |
|
|
|
|
LPM heavy |
LC |
49152 |
786432 |
|
32768 |
|
32768 |
|
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
235929 |
|
32768 |
|
|
|
2048 |
|
|
|
|
L2 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 scale |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Internet peering |
LC |
40960 |
1000448 |
500224 |
32768 (v4/V6) |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
NA |
NA |
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
176947 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dual-stack host scale |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dual-stack Multicast |
LC |
65536 |
262144 |
147456 |
114688 (v4/v6) |
|
65536 |
|
8192 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
|
|
|
|
32768 |
8192 |
|
|
|
|
|
MPLS scale |
LC |
90112 |
471859 |
265420 |
32768 (v4/v6) |
|
32768 |
16384 |
|
|
4000 |
2000 |
7166 |
FM |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mcast heavy |
LC |
16384 |
471859 |
265420 |
49152 (v4/v6) |
|
32768 |
|
32768 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
|
|
|
|
24576 |
|
8192 |
|
|
|
|
Mcast ext heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Service provider |
LC |
65536 |
629145 |
353894 |
(v4/v6) |
|
49152 |
32768 |
8192 |
|
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8192 |
|
|
|
Table 12. Forwarding scale on FX linecard
FX |
|||||||||||||
|
|
MAC |
IPv4 Trie |
IPv6 Trie |
IPV4 Host routes |
IPV6 Host routes |
ARP |
ND |
IPv4 Mcast |
IPv6 Mcast |
MPLS label (without ECMP) |
MPLS label (with ECMP) |
ECMP Groups |
Default |
LC |
98304 |
589824 |
|
65536 |
|
49152 |
|
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
176947 |
|
32768 |
|
32768 |
|
2048 |
|
|
|
|
LPM heavy |
LC |
49152 |
786432 |
|
32768 |
|
32768 |
|
8192 |
2048 |
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
235929 |
|
32768 |
|
|
|
2048 |
|
|
|
|
L2 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
L3 scale |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Internet peering |
LC |
40960 |
1256448 |
628224 |
32768 (v4/V6) |
32768 |
32768 |
16384 |
NA |
NA |
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
176947 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dual-stack host scale |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dual-stack Multicast |
LC |
65536 |
262144 |
147456 |
114688 (v4/v6) |
|
65536 |
|
8192 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
|
|
|
|
32768 |
8192 |
|
|
|
|
|
MPLS scale |
LC |
90112 |
471859 |
265420 |
32768 (v4/v6) |
|
32768 |
16384 |
|
|
4000 |
2000 |
7166 |
FM |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mcast heavy |
LC |
16384 |
471859 |
265420 |
49152 (v4/v6) |
|
32768 |
|
32768 |
8192 |
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
|
|
|
|
24576 |
|
8192 |
|
|
|
|
Mcast ext heavy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Service provider |
LC |
65536 |
629145 |
353894 |
(v4/v6) |
|
49152 |
32768 |
8192 |
|
1000 |
500 |
24574 |
FM |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8192 |
|
|
|
Note: All these scales are as per Cisco NX-OS Release 9.3(5).
Configuration and verification of routing template
Changing the routing template is a two-step process:
1. Select the desired routing template.
2. Save the configuration and reload the device.
N9K# conf
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
N9K(config)#
N9K(config)#
N9K(config)# system routing?
template-dual-stack-host-scale Dual Stack Host Scale
template-dual-stack-mcast Dual Stack Multicast
template-internet-peering Internet Peering
template-l2-heavy L2 Heavy 200k MAC scale profile
template-lpm-heavy LPM Heavy
template-mpls-heavy MPLS Heavy Scale
template-multicast-ext-heavy Multicast Extended Heavy Scale
template-multicast-heavy Multicast Heavy Scale
template-service-provider Service Provider
N9K(config)# system routing template-lpm-heavy
Warning: The command will take effect after next reload.Set the LPM scale using below CLI if multicast is needed
hardware profile multicast max-limit lpm-entries <2048/4096>
Note: This requires copy running-config to startup-config before switch reload.
N9K(config)#
N9K(config)# copy running-config startup-config
[########################################] 100%
Copy complete, now saving to disk (please wait)...
Copy complete.
N9K(config)#
N9K(config)# reload
This command will reboot the system. (y/n)? [n] y
The Show hardware forwarding command is used to check the configured routing template, and to check the scale and utilization of the various forwarding tables.
N9K# sh hardware capacity forwarding
L2 table utilization on Module = 1
Asic Max Count Used Count
-----+---------+---------
0 32768 0
<>
IPv4/IPv6 hosts and routes summary on module : 1
--------------------------------------------------
Configured System Routing Mode: LPM Heavy
Dynamic V6 Trie : False
--------------------------------------------------
Max IPv4 Trie route entries: 786432
Max IPv6 Trie route entries: 353894
Max TCAM table entries : 16384
Max V4 Ucast DA TCAM table entries : 6144
Max V6 Ucast DA TCAM table entries : 2048
Max native host route entries (shared v4/v6) : 32768
Max v6 /128 learnt host route entries : 24576
Max ARP entries (Entries might overflow into tcam as Host-As-Route): 32768
Max ND entries (Entries might overflow into tcam as Host-As-Route): 16384
Total number of IPv4 host trie routes used : 0
Total number of IPv4 host tcam routes used : 1
Total number of IPv4 LPM trie routes used : 0
Total number of IPv4 LPM tcam routes used : 3
Total number of IPv6 host trie routes used : 0
Total number of IPv6 host tcam routes used: 0
Total number of IPv6 LPM trie routes used : 0
Total number of IPv6 LPM tcam routes used : 8
Total number of IPv4 host native routes used in native tiles : 1
Total number of IPv6 host native routes used in native tiles : 0
Total number of IPv6 ND/local routes used in native tiles : 0
Total number of IPv6 host /128 learnt routes used in native tiles : 0
IPv4 Host-as-Route count : 1
IPv6 Host-as-Route count : 0
Nexthop count : 3
Percentage utilization of IPv4 native host routes : 0.00
Percentage utilization of IPv6 native host routes : 0.00
Percentage utilization of IPv6 ND/local routes : 0.00
Percentage utilization of IPv6 host /128 learnt routes : 0.00
Percentage utilization of IPv4 trie routes : 0.00
Percentage utilization of IPv6 trie routes : 0.00
Percentage utilization of IPv4 TCAM routes : 0.08
Percentage utilization of IPv6 TCAM routes : 0.39
Percentage utilization of nexthop entries : 0.00
IPv4/Ipv6 Mcast host entry summary
----------------------------------
Max Mcast Route Entries Limit = 8192
Max Mcast V4 SA TCAM entries (S/m) = 2048
Max Overflow Mcast v4 SA TCAM entries = 0
Max Overflow Mcast V4 DA TCAM entries = 0
Total number of IPv4 Multicast SA LPM routes used = 0
Percentage utilization of IPv4 Multicast SA LPM routes = 0.00
Used Mcast Entries = 0
Used MCIDX Count = 1
Used *,G Entries in HRT = 0
Used *,G Entries in LPM = 0
Used (S,G) Entries = 0
Used Mcast S/32 Entries in HRT = 0
Max Reserved Mcast S/32 and G/32 in LPM = 0
Used Mcast S/32 Entries in SA LPM = 0
Percentage utilization of S/32 in SA LPM = 0.00
Used Mcast G/32 Entries in DA LPM = 0
Percentage utilization of G/32 in DA LPM = 0.00
Max IPv6 Mcast Route Entries Limit = 2048
Used IPv6 Mcast Entries = 0
Used IPv6 *,G Entries in HRT = 0
Used IPv6 *,G Entries in LPM = 0
Used IPv6 (S,G) Entries = 0
Used IPv6 Mcast S/128 Entries in HRT = 0
Mcast Mac entry summary
----------------------------------
Max Mcast Mac Route Entries Limit = 0
Used Mcast Mac Entries = 0
-------------------MPLS Hardware Resources------------------
Max Label Entries ( without ECMP ) = 1000
Max Label Entries ( with ECMP ) = 500
Used Label Entries = 0
No. of MPLS VPN Labels Used = 0
-------------------ECMP GROUP/TILE INFO-------------------
ECMP group supported : Yes
Max ECMP groups : 1022
ECMP groups used : 0
Num of ECMP group member tiles : 1
Num of ECMP group tiles : 1
QoS Resource Utilization
------------------------
Resource Module Total Used Free
--------- ------ ----- ---- ----
Aggregate policers: 1 4094 50 4044
Distributed policers: 1 4094 0 4094
Policer Profiles: 1 4094 50 4044
N9K#
The Cisco Nexus 9000 Cloud Scale ASIC delivers the needed performance and scale to meet and exceed the requirements for next generation data center networks. The ability to use the same hardware in a variety of deployments and use cases provides investment protection for our customers. Combined with rich features, granular hardware telemetry ensures data center design and operations can be optimized.
Cisco Nexus 9000 Series NX-OS Unicast Routing Configuration Guide, Release 9.3(x): https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/switches/datacenter/nexus9000/sw/93x/unicast/configuration/guide/b-cisco-nexus-9000-series-nx-os-unicast-routing-configuration-guide-93x/b-cisco-nexus-9000-series-nx-os-unicast-routing-configuration-guide-93x_chapter_011001.html
Cisco Nexus 9000 Series NX-OS Verified Scalability Guide, Release 9.3(5): https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/switches/datacenter/nexus9000/sw/93x/scalability/guide-935/cisco-nexus-9000-series-nx-os-verified-scalability-guide-935.html