Cisco Nexus 9000 Series NX-OS IP Fabric for Media Release Notes, Release 10.1(2)

Available Languages

Download Options

  • PDF
    (303.6 KB)
    View with Adobe Reader on a variety of devices
Updated:May 14, 2021

Bias-Free Language

The documentation set for this product strives to use bias-free language. For the purposes of this documentation set, bias-free is defined as language that does not imply discrimination based on age, disability, gender, racial identity, ethnic identity, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, and intersectionality. Exceptions may be present in the documentation due to language that is hardcoded in the user interfaces of the product software, language used based on RFP documentation, or language that is used by a referenced third-party product. Learn more about how Cisco is using Inclusive Language.

Available Languages

Download Options

  • PDF
    (303.6 KB)
    View with Adobe Reader on a variety of devices
Updated:May 14, 2021
 

 

This document describes the Cisco IP fabric for media solution, new hardware and software features, upgrade instructions, and caveats for Cisco NX-OS Release 10.1(2) software for use on the following: 

     N9K-X9624D-R2

     N9K-C9508-FM-R2

Table 1.                 Online History Change

Date

Description

May 14, 2021

  Cisco NX-OS Release 10.1(2) became available.

IP Fabric for Media

Today, the broadcast industry uses a serial digital interface (SDI) router and SDI cables to transport video and audio traffic. The SDI cables can carry only a single unidirectional signal. As a result, many cables, frequently stretched over long distances, is required, making it difficult and time-consuming to expand or change an SDI-based infrastructure.

Cisco’s IP fabric for media solution helps transition from an SDI router to an IP-based infrastructure. In an IP-based infrastructure, a single cable has the capacity to carry multiple bidirectional traffic flows and can support different flow sizes without requiring changes to the physical infrastructure. The solution uses Cisco Nexus 9000 Series switches in conjunction with the Cisco non-blocking multicast (NBM) algorithm (an intelligent traffic management algorithm) and with or without the Cisco DCNM Media Controller to provide a highly reliable (zero drop multicast), highly visible, highly secure, and highly available network.

Cisco Nexus 9000 Series NX-OS IP Fabric for Media Release 10.1(2) supports two deployment methods:

   Spine-leaf topology—A single or multi-spine deployment method with variable flow size that allows the NBM fabric to form a multicast flow.

   Single modular switch—An architecture suitable for fixed deployments, with the controller providing features such as flow visibility, security, and monitoring.

Supported Device Hardware

Table 2 lists the hardware that the Cisco Nexus 9000 Series NX-OS IP Fabric for Media Release 10.1(2) supports. For additional information about the supported hardware, see the Hardware Installation Guide for your Cisco Nexus 9000 Series device.

Table 2.           Cisco Nexus 9000 Series Hardware

Product ID

Hardware Description

Role in Topology

N9K-C92160YC-X

Cisco Nexus 92160YC-X 1-RU switch with 48 10/25-Gigabit SFP+ downlink ports and 6 40-Gigabit QSFP+ uplink ports, with 4 of the uplink ports capable of supporting QSFP28 transceivers (100 Gigabits)

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C9236C

Cisco Nexus 9236C 1-RU switch with 36 40/100-Gigabit QSFP28 ports (144 10/25-Gigabit ports when using breakout cables)

Spine or leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C9272Q

Cisco Nexus 9272Q 2-RU switch with 72 40-Gigabit Ethernet QSFP+ ports (up to 35 of the ports [ports 37-71] also support breakout cables providing up to 140 10-Gigabit connections)

Spine or leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C93108TC-EX

Cisco Nexus 93108TC-EX 1-RU switch with 48 10GBASE-T ports and 6 40/100-Gigabit QSFP28 ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C93108TC-FX

Cisco Nexus 93108TC-FX 1-RU Top-of-Rack switch with 48 10GBASE-T (copper) ports and 6 40/100-Gigabit QSFP28 ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C9316D-GX

Cisco Nexus 9316D 2RU switch with 28 fixed 40/100G QSFP-28 ports and 8 fixed 40/100/400G QSFP-DD ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C93180LC-EX

Cisco Nexus 93180LC-EX 1-RU switch with 32 40/50-Gigabit downlink QSFP+ ports or 18 fixed 100-Gigabit uplink QSFP28 ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C93180YC-EX

Cisco Nexus 93180YC-EX 1-RU switch with 48 10/25-Gigabit Ethernet ports and 6 40/100-Gigabit QSFP28 ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C93180YC-FX

Cisco Nexus 93180YC-FX 1-RU Top-of-Rack switch with 48 10/25-Gigabit SFP28 ports and 6 40/100-Gigabit QSFP28 ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C93180YC-FX3S

Cisco Nexus 93180YC-FX3S 1-RU Top-of-Rack switch with 48 25/50/100-Gigabit Ethernet SFP28 ports and 6 10/25/40/50/100-Gigabit QSFP28 ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C93216TC-FX2

Cisco Nexus 93216TC-FX2 2-RU switch with 96 100M/1G/10G RJ45 ports and 12 40/100-Gigabit QSFP28 ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C93240YC-FX2

Cisco Nexus 93240YC-FX2 1.2-RU Top-of-Rack switch with 48 10/25-Gigabit SFP28 fiber ports and 12 40/100-Gigabit Ethernet QSFP28 ports

Spine or leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C93360YC-FX2

Cisco Nexus 93360YC-FX2 2-RU switch with 96 10/25-Gigabit SFP+ ports and 12 40/10-Gigabit Ethernet QSFP28 ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C9336C-FX2

Cisco Nexus 9336C-FX2 1-RU switch with 36 40/100-Gigabit Ethernet QSFP28 ports

Spine or leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C9348GC-FXP

Cisco Nexus 9348GC-FXP switch with 48 100M/1GBASE-T (copper) ports, 4 10/25-Gigabit SFP28 ports, and 2 40/100-Gigabit QSFP ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C93600CD-GX

Cisco Nexus 93600CD-GX 2RU switch with 28 fixed 40/100G QSFP-28 ports and 8 fixed 40/100/400G QSFP-DD ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C9364C

Cisco Nexus 9364C 2-RU Top-of-Rack switch with 64 40/100-Gigabit QSFP28 ports and 2 1/10-Gigabit SFP+ ports

Spine switch in spine-leaf topology

N9K-C9364C-GX

Cisco Nexus 9364C-GX 2RU switch with 64 fixed 40/100G QSFP-28 ports

Leaf switch in spine-leaf topology

Cisco Nexus 9504 or 9508 switch with the following line cards:

N9K-X9636C-R

N9K-X9636C-RX

N9K-X9636Q-R

Cisco Nexus 9504 4-slot or 9508 8-slot switch

N9K-X9636C-R: 36-port 40/100-Gigabit Ethernet QSFP28 line card

N9K-X9636C-RX: 36-port 40/100-Gigabit Ethernet QSFP28 line card

N9K-X9636Q-R: 36-port 40-Gigabit Ethernet QSFP+ line card

Spine in spine-leaf topology or single modular switch

N9K-X9624D-R2

N9K-C9508-FM-R2

N9K-X9624D-R2
Line card with 24 400G QSFP-DD ports (only to be used with 8-slot chassis)

N9K-C9508-FM-R2 
Fabric module for 400G line card (only to be used with 8-slot chassis)

 

Spine in spine-leaf topology or single modular switch

New and Enhanced Features

There are no new and enhanced features in Cisco Nexus 9000 Series NX-OS IP Fabric for Media Release 10.1(2).

Open Issues

There are no open issues in Cisco Nexus 9000 Series NX-OS IP Fabric for Media Release 10.1(2).

Resolved Issues

There are no resolved issues in Cisco Nexus 9000 Series NX-OS IP Fabric for Media Release 10.1(2).

Limitations

When using ASM (IGMPv2), the bandwidth is reserved between the receiver leaf switch and the spine switch even when the sender is local to the receiver leaf switch.

NBM static OIF can include an SVI; however, an IGMP snooping entry must be manually created to force the traffic out of the Layer 2 physical interface.

To prevent packet drops for NBM flows, configure 5% more bandwidth than the traffic being sent.

Upgrade Instructions

Follow these steps to upgrade from a Cisco NX-OS 7.x or 9.x release to Cisco NX-OS Release 10.1(2) in an IP fabric for media deployment.

Note:       For Cisco Nexus 9504 and 9508 switches with -R line cards, you must upgrade from Cisco NX-OS Release 7.0(3)F3(4) to a 10.x release.

1.     Shut down the endpoint-facing ports on the switches.

2.     Disable NBM (using the no feature nbm command).

3.     Disable the ip pim pre-build-spt force command on the spine switches in your fabric.

4.     Disable PIM passive mode (using the no ip pim passive command).

5.     Upgrade the switch software from 7.x or 9.x to 10.1(1).

6.     For Cisco Nexus 9504 and 9508 switches with -R line cards, configure these TCAM carving commands in the following order and then reload the switch:

hardware access-list tcam region redirect_v6 0
hardware access-list tcam region ing-nbm 2048

7.     Upgrade DCNM.

8.     Configure PIM and MSDP, if applicable.

9.     Enable NBM (using the feature nbm command).

10.  Configure NBM policies using the CLI or DCNM. (See the Cisco Nexus 9000 Series IP Fabric for Media Solution Guide, Release 10.1(x).)

11.  If you're not using DCNM, disable IGMP static OIF and create an NBM flow definition to establish a flow.

12.  Re-enable all ports facing the endpoints.

Related Documentation

   Cisco Nexus 9000 Series IP Fabric for Media Solution Guide, Release 10.1(x)

   Cisco Nexus 9000 Series NX-OS Release Notes, Release 10.1(x)

   Cisco Nexus 9000 Series NX-OS Verified Scalability Guide, Release 10.1(x)

   Cisco Nexus 3000 and 9000 Series NX-API REST SDK User Guide and API Reference

   Cisco DCNM Media Controller Configuration Guide, Release 11.5(1)

   Cisco DCNM Installation and Upgrade Guide for Media Controller Deployment, Release 11.5(1)

   The entire Cisco Nexus 9000 Series NX-OS documentation set is available at the following URL:

http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/switches/nexus-9000-series-switches/tsd-products-support-series-home.html

Documentation Feedback

To provide technical feedback on this document, or to report an error or omission, please send your comments to nexus9k-docfeedback@cisco.com. We appreciate your feedback.

Legal Information

Cisco and the Cisco logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Cisco and/or its affiliates in the U.S. and other countries. To view a list of Cisco trademarks, go to this URL: www.cisco.com/go/trademarks. Third-party trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word partner does not imply a partnership relationship between Cisco and any other company. (1721R)

Any Internet Protocol (IP) addresses and phone numbers used in this document are not intended to be actual addresses and phone numbers. Any examples, command display output, network topology diagrams, and other figures included in the document are shown for illustrative purposes only. Any use of actual IP addresses or phone numbers in illustrative content is unintentional and coincidental.

© 2021 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.

Learn more