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H3C S5130S-28P-HPWR-EI-AC 24xHi-PoE++(370W)+4xCombo Enhanced Switch

H3C S5130S-EI Series Switches – A simple (fixed power design), cost-effective and easy to deploy access switching solution with POE+ that offer enhanced security, high-density GE and 10GbE uplinks, static route, RIP, OSPF, SDN and IRF enabled, flexible management, which meet the requirements for SME access, enterprise desktop access and high-density campus access.

  • S5130S-28P-HPWR-EI-AC

  • H3C

  • New

  • 1 Year

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Software Defined Network (SDN)

Software Defined Network (SDN) is an innovative network architecture that simplifies network management and reduces maintenance complexity by separating network control layer and network forwarding layer through OpenFlow. More importantly, it implements flexible network flow control and provides a well-defined network platform for core network application and innovation.

H3C S5130S-EI series switches support a large network flow table. Combined with H3C SDN controller, it can easily implement a two-layer network architecture and quickly add functions in existing network in order to drastically reduce network management complexity while substantially lowers network maintenance cost.

IRF2 (Intelligent Resilient Framework 2)

H3C S5130S-EI series switches support IRF2 technology that connects multiple physical devices (up to 9) to a logical device that users can manage and use these devices as a single device. IRF can bring the following benefits to the user:

  • Simplify the management: Any one of the ports can be connected to any of the devices to login to a unified logical device, and to manage the whole system and all the members of the system through the configuration of a single device, without the physical connection to each member of the device.

  • High scalability: With IRF2, plug-n-play device aggregation can be achieved by adding one or more switches into the IRF2 stack and enabling IRF2 stacking on the new device. New devices can be managed with a single IP, and upgraded at the same time to reduce network expansion cost.

  • High reliability: IRF2 patented 1: N standby technology allows each slave device in the IRF2 stack to serve as the backup of the master, creating control and data link redundancy, as well as uninterrupted layer-3 forwarding. This improves the reliability, avoids unplanned business downtime and serves to improve overall performance. When the master device fails, traffic remains uninterrupted.

  • Load balancing: IRF2 supports cross-device link aggregation, upstream and downstream can be connected to more than one physical link, which creates another layer of network redundancy and boosts the network resource utilization.

  • Availability: H3C Implements IRF2 through standard Gigabit Ethernet (1GE) ports or 10 Gigabit Ethernet (10GE) ports which allocates bandwidth for business and application access and reasonably splits local traffic and upstream traffic.

Comprehensive Security Control

H3C S5130S-EI series switches support innovative single-port multi-authentication function, the access authentication modes supported by different clients are different. For example, some clients can only perform MAC addresses Authentication (such as the printer terminal), and some user host for 802.1X authentication, and some user hosts only want to access through the Web portal authentication. In order to flexibly adapt to the multi-authentication requirements of the network environment, H3C S5130S-EI series switches support single-port multi-authentication unified deployment.

H3C S5130S-EI series switches support SSHv2 (Secure Shell V2) to secure information security, and strong authentication protect the Ethernet network switch from attacks such as IP address spoofing and clear text interception.

ARP attack and ARP virus are major threats to LAN security, so H3C S5130S-EI series switches come with diverse ARP protection functions such as ARP Detection to challenge the legitimacy of client, validate the ARP packets, and set a speed limit for ARP to prevent ARP swarm attacks from targeting CPU.

H3C S5130S-EI series switches support EAD (End User Admission Domination) function. With the iMC (intelligent Management Centre) system, EAD integrates terminal security policies, such as anti-virus and patch update, network access control and access right control policies to form a cooperative security system. By checking, isolating, updating, managing, and monitoring access terminals, EAD changes to passive mode, single point network protection to active, comprehensive network protection, and changes separate management to centralized management, enhancing the network capability for preventing viruses, worms, and new threats.

High Availability

H3C S5130S-EI series switches feature multiple redundancy measures at the device and link levels, support current and voltage surge control, overheat protection, power and fan troubleshooting and alert, as well as fan speed adjustment when the temperature changes. S5130S-28F-EI/S5130S-52F-EI switch also supports hot swappable AC/DC dual power supply.

Apart from device level redundancy, H3C S5130S-EI series switches also provide diverse link redundancy support such as LACP/STP/RSTP/MSTP/Smart Link protocols. It supports IRF2 and 1: N redundancy backup as well as cross-device link aggregation which substantially increases network reliability.

Abundant QoS

H3C S5130S-EI series switches support packet filtering at Layer 2 through Layer 4, and traffic classification based on source MAC addresses, destination MAC addresses, source IP addresses, destination IP addresses, TCP/UDP port numbers, protocol types, and VLANs. It supports flexible queue scheduling algorithms based on ports and queues, including strict priority (SP), weighted round Robin (WRR) and SP+WRR. The S5130S-EI switch series enables committed access rate (CAR) with the minimum granularity of 8 kbps. It supports port mirroring in the outbound and inbound directions, to monitor the packets on the specific ports, and to mirror the packets to the monitor port for network detection and troubleshooting.

Professional Surge Protection Function

H3C S5130S-EI series switches use professional built-in surge protection technology and supports the industry-leading 10KV service port surge protection capability, which greatly reduces the damage rate of surge strikes to equipment even in harsh working environments.

Excellent Manageability

H3C S5130S-EI series switches make switch management with ease with the support of SNMPv1/v2c/v3, which can be managed by NM platforms, such as Open View and iMC. With CLI and Telnet switch management is made easier. And with SSH 2.0 encryption, switch management security is enhanced.

Green Design

H3C S5130S-EI series switches implement a variety of green energy saving features, including auto-power-down (port automatic energy saving), if the interface status has been down for a period of time, the system automatically stops the interface power and the system enters power-saving mode. They also support EEE energy feature, by which if a port stays idle for a period of time, the system will set the port to energy-saving mode. H3C S5130S-EI series switches are also compliant with material environmental protection and the EU RoHS safety standard.

The S5130S-EI switch series 8-port (S5130S-10P-EI, S5130S-12TP-EI, S5130S-10P-HPWR-EI and S5130S-12TP-HPWR-EI) and 24-port (S5130S-28P-EI) switches are fanless design, significantly reduce devices power consumption and noise.


Hardware Specifications

Features

S5130S-28P-HPWR-EI-AC

Port Switching Capacity

56Gbps

Forwarding Capacity

42Mpps

Box Switching Capacity

336Gbps

CPU

1 Core, 800MHz

Flash/SDRAM

256MB/512MB

Latency (64byte/µs)

GE: < 5µs

Dimensions(W× D×H)

440×260×43.6 mm

Weight

≤4.5kg

10/100/1000 Base-T port

24

SFP Port

4(4*Base-T combo)

Maximum Stacking Bandwidth

16Gbps

Maximum Stacking Num

9

Input Voltage

AC: Rated voltage range: 100V~240V AC, 50/60Hz

Power Consumption(full configuration)

MIN:
AC: 15W

MAX:
AC: 443W(PoE 370W)

Fan NUM

3

MTBF(Year)

52.81

MTTR(Hour)

1

Operating
Temperature

-5℃ ~ 50℃(normal operating temperature)
-5℃ ~ 45℃(When using transceiver modules with maximum transmission distance < 80km)
-5℃ ~ 40℃(When using transceiver modules with maximum transmission distance ≥ 80km)

Storage Temperature

-40℃ ~ 70℃

Operating & Storage Relative Humidity

5% RH to 95% RH, non-condensing

Software Specifications

Feature

S5130S-EI Series Switches

VLAN

VLAN ID range 0 to 4095(Total 4096, 0 and 4095 are reserved for the system )

Access/Trunk/Hybrid VLAN

port-based VLAN

MAC-based VLAN

IP subnet-based VLAN

protocol-based VLAN

IEEE 802.1P(CoS priority)

Private VLAN

Voice VLAN

Guest VLAN

MVRP (Multiple VLAN Registration Protocol) (compliance with GVRP)

QinQ (802.1Q-in-802.1Q)

Vlan mapping

Static/Dynamic/Blackhole/Multiport unicast MAC

MAC automatic learning and aging

port-based/VLAN-based MAC learning limit

MAC filter

Port isolation

Loop detection

STP(Spanning tree protocol )

RSTP (Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol)

MSTP (Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol)

PVST (Per-VLAN Spanning Tree) (compatible with PVST+/RPVST+)

BPDU/root/loop/TC-BPDU/PVST BPDU guard

Role/TC-BPDU transmission restriction

LLDP (Link Layer Discovery Protocol) and LLDP-MED

Jumbo frame

Store-and-forward

Ethernet link aggregation

static aggregation

dynamic aggregation

GE/10GE port aggregation

LACP (Link Aggregation Control Protocol)

S-MLAG (Simple multichassis link aggregation)

IP Services

ARP snooping/fast-reply/direct route advertisement/ping

ARP attack detection

ARP source suppression

DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol)

DHCP Server/relay agent/client/snooping

DNS (Domain Name System)

UDP helper

ND (Neighbor Discovery)

ND snooping/proxy/direct route advertisement/ping

DHCPv6 Server/relay agent/client/snooping/guard

HTTP redirect

Routing

Static routing, RIP, OSPF

IPv6 static routing, RIPng, OSPFv3

IPv4/IPv6 dual stack

Pingv6, Telnetv6, FTPv6, TFTPv6, DNSv6, ICMPv6

Multicast

PIM snooping

IGMP Snooping

Multicast VLAN

IPv6 PIM snooping

MLD Snooping

IPv6 Multicast VLAN

ACL/QoS

ACL (Access Control List)

Advanced ACL

Ingress and Egress ACL

Diff-Serv QoS

Eight queues on a port

802.1P/DSCP Priority marking and remarking

802.1p, TOS, DSCP priority mapping

Flexible queue scheduling algorithms including SP, WRR, SP+WRR

Traffic shaping

Time ranges

Traffic classification based on source MAC, destination MAC, source IP, destination IP, port, protocol, and VLAN

Security

RBAC (Role-based access control)

AAA (Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting)

RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service)

TACACS (Terminal Access Controller Access Control System)

HWTACACS (HW Terminal Access Controller Access Control System) (Same authentication processes and implementations with TACACS+)

802.1X authentication

Portal authentication

MAC authentication

Web authentication

Triple authentication

Port security

SSH1.x and SSH2.0 (Secure Shell)

SSL (Secure Sockets Layer)

HTTPs

Public Key Infrastructure (PKI)

Control Plane Protection (CoPP)

Attack detection and prevention

CPU attack prevention

ARP attack prevention

ICMP attack prevention

TCP attack prevention

Storm suppression based on PPS/BPS/port bandwidth percentage

Broadcast traffic/Multicast traffic/Unknown unicast traffic suppression

IPSG (IP source guard)

IPv6 RA Guard

MFF (MAC-forced forwarding)

SAVI (Source Address Validation Improvement)

FIPS (Federal Information Processing Standards )

Hierarchical user management and password protection

EAD (Endpoint Admission Defense)

Basic and advanced ACLs for packet filtering

OSPF, RIPv2 plain text and MD5 authentication

High Availability

Ethernet OAM (IEEE 802.3ah)

CFD (Connectivity Fault Detection)(IEEE 802.1ag and ITU-T Y.1731)

DLDP (Device Link Detection Protocol )

RRPP (Rapid Ring Protection Protocol)

ERPS (G.8032 Ethernet Ring Protection Switching )

Smart Link

Monitor Link

VRRPv2(Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol)

VRRPv3

BFD (Bidirectional forwarding detection)

BFD for VRRP/OSPF/RSVP/static routing

Track

CPU protection

Link aggregation

VCT (virtual cable test)

Network Management

NQA (Network quality analyzer)

performance management through gRPC or NETCONF

NTP (Network Time Protocol)

SNMPv1/SNMPv2c/SNMPv3

RMON (Remote Network Monitoring) and groups 1,2,3 and 9

NETCONF/YANG

EAA (Embedded Automation Architecture)

Port mirroring SPAN (Switch Port Analyzer)/RSPAN(Remote SPAN)

Flow mirroring

sFlow

Information center

VCF (Virtual Converged Framework)

CWMP (CPE WAN Management Protocol/TR-069)

System logs

Debugging information output

Configuration through CLI, Web UI, Telnet, and console port

Zero Touch Provisioning

Loading and upgrading through XModem/FTP/TFTP/SFTP/USB

iMC network management system

SmartMC(embedded Smart Graphical Management Center) Member

Stacking

IRF2(Intelligent Resilient Framework 2)

Distributed device management

Distributed link aggregation

Distributed resilient routing

Stacking through standard Ethernet ports

Local device stacking and remote device stacking

LACP-, BFD-, and ARP-based multi-active detection (MAD)

Visualization

gRPC (Google remote procedure call)

Programmability and Automation

Auto DevOps by using Python, NETCONF, TCL, and Restful APIs for automated network programming

Forwarding

Wire-speed/Line-rate architecture

Energy Saving

EEE (802.3az Energy Efficient Ethernet)

EMC

FCC Part 15 Subpart B CLASS A

ICES-003 CLASS A

VCCI CLASS A

CISPR 32 CLASS A

EN 55032 CLASS A

AS/NZS CISPR32 CLASS A

CISPR 24

EN 55024

EN 61000-3-2

EN 61000-3-3

ETSI EN 300 386

Safety

UL 60950-1

CAN/CSA C22.2 No 60950-1

IEC 60950-1

EN 60950-1

AS/NZS 60950-1

FDA 21 CFR Subchapter J

GB 4943.1

Performance Specification

Entries

S5130S-EI Series Switches

MAC address entries

16K

VLAN table

4096 (VLAN IDs 0 and 4095 are reserved)

Active VLAN

4094

VLAN interface

32*

IPv4 routing entries

1024

IPv4 ARP entries

1024

IPv4 ACL entries

512

IPv4 multicast L2 entries

1000

IPv6 unicast routing entries

240

QOS forward queues

8

IPv6 ACL entries

512

IPv6 ND entries

240

Jumbo frame length

10240

MAX num in one link group

8

Link group num

124

*Special versions support 64 VLAN interfaces


Standards and Protocols Compliance

Organization

Standards And Protocols

IEEE

802.1x Port based network access control protocol

802.1ab Link Layer Discovery Protocol

802.1ak MVRP and MRP

802.1ax Link Aggregation

802.1d Media Access Control Bridges

802.1p Priority

802.1q VLANs

802.1s Multiple Spanning Trees

802.1ag Connectivity Fault Management

802.1v VLAN classification by Protocol and Port

802.1w Rapid Reconfiguration of Spanning Tree

802.3ad Link Aggregation Control Protocol

802.3af Power over Ethernet

802.3at Power over Ethernet

802.3bt Power over Ethernet

802.3az Energy Efficient Ethernet

802.3ah Ethernet in the First Mile

802.3x Full Duplex and flow control

802.3u 100BASE-T

802.3ab 1000BASE-T

802.3z 1000BASE-X

802.3ae 10-Gigabit Ethernet

IETF

RFC 768 User Datagram Protocol (UDP)

RFC 791 Internet Protocol (IP)

RFC 792 Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP)

RFC 793 Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)

RFC 813 Window and Acknowledgement Strategy in TCP

RFC 815 IP datagram reassembly algorithms

RFC 8201 Path MTU Discovery for IP version 6

RFC 826 Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)

RFC 879 TCP maximum segment size and related topics

RFC 896 Congestion control in IP/TCP internetworks

RFC 917 Internet subnets

RFC 919 Broadcasting Internet Datagrams

RFC 922 Broadcasting Internet Datagrams in the Presence of Subnets (IP_BROAD)

RFC 951 BOOTP

RFC 1027 Proxy ARP

RFC 1122 Requirements for Internet Hosts - Communications Layers

RFC 1213 MIB-2 Stands for Management Information Base

RFC 1215 Convention for defining traps for use with the SNMP

RFC 1256 ICMP Router Discovery Messages

RFC 1350 TFTP Protocol (revision 2)

RFC 1393 Traceroute Using an IP Option

RFC 1519 Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR)

RFC 1542 BOOTP Extensions

RFC 1583 OSPF Version 2

RFC 1591 Domain Name System Structure and Delegation

RFC 1757 Remote Network Monitoring Management Information Base

RFC 1772 Application of the Border Gateway Protocol in the Internet

RFC 1812 Requirements for IP Version 4 Router

RFC 1918 Address Allocation for Private Internet

RFC 2131 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)

RFC 2132 DHCP Options and BOOTP Vendor Extensions

RFC 2273 SNMPv3 Applications

RFC 2328 OSPF Version 2

RFC 2375 IPv6 Multicast Address Assignments

RFC 2401 Security Architecture for the Internet Protocol

RFC 2402 IP Authentication Header

RFC 2460 Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6) Specification

RFC 2464 Transmission of IPv6 over Ethernet Networks

RFC 2576 (Coexistence between SNMP V1, V2, V3)

RFC 2579 Textual Conventions for SMIv2

RFC 2580 Conformance Statements for SMIv2

RFC 2711 IPv6 Router Alert Option

RFC 2787 Definitions of Managed Objects for the Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol

RFC 2925 Definitions of Managed Objects for Remote Ping, Traceroute, and Lookup Operations

RFC 3101 OSPF Not-so-stubby-area option

RFC 3046 DHCP Relay Agent Information Option

RFC 3056 Connection of IPv6 Domains via IPv4 Clouds

RFC 3137 OSPF Stub Router Advertisement sFlow

RFC 3416 (SNMP Protocol Operations v2)

RFC 3417 (SNMP Transport Mappings)

RFC 3418 Management Information Base (MIB) for the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)

RFC 3484 Default Address Selection for IPv6

RFC 3509 Alternative Implementations of OSPF Area Border Routers

RFC 3580 IEEE 802.1X Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS) Usage Guidelines

RFC 3623 Graceful OSPF Restart

RFC 3768 Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP)

RFC 4022 MIB for TCP

RFC 4113 MIB for UDP

RFC 4213 Basic Transition Mechanisms for IPv6 Hosts and Routers

RFC 4251 The Secure Shell (SSH) Protocol

RFC 4252 SSHv6 Authentication

RFC 4253 SSHv6 Transport Layer

RFC 4254 SSHv6 Connection

RFC 4291 IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture

RFC 4292 IP Forwarding Table MIB

RFC 4293 Management Information Base for the Internet Protocol (IP)

RFC 4419 Key Exchange for SSH

RFC 4443 ICMPv6

RFC 4541 IGMP & MLD Snooping Switch

RFC 4552 Authentication/Confidentiality for OSPFv3

RFC 4750 OSPFv2 MIB partial support no SetMIB

RFC 4861 IPv6 Neighbor Discovery

RFC 4862 IPv6 Stateless Address Auto-configuration

RFC 4940 IANA Considerations for OSPF

RFC 5095 Deprecation of Type 0 Routing Headers in IPv6

RFC 5187 OSPFv3 Graceful Restart

RFC 5340 OSPFv3 for IPv6

RFC 5424 Syslog Protocol

RFC 5798 VRRP (exclude Accept Mode and sub-sec timer)

RFC 5880 Bidirectional Forwarding Detection

RFC 5905 Network Time Protocol Version 4: Protocol and Algorithms Specification

RFC 6620 FCFS SAVI

RFC 6987 OSPF Stub Router Advertisement

RFC 5280 Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile

RFC 5381 Experience of Implementing NETCONF over SOAP

ITU

ITU-T Y.1731

ITU-T Rec G.8032/Y.1344 Mar. 2010


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