Cisco Nexus 9400 CPU card with PTP, SyncE

CiscoSKU: 7432519

Price:
Sale price$9,802.99

Description

The Cisco Nexus 9400 CPU Card with PTP and SyncE is engineered to meet the demands of today’s complex data networking and optical networks. This high-performance CPU card acts as the brain of your Nexus 9400 chassis, delivering scalable control plane processing, enhanced reliability, and advanced timing capabilities that keep your network synchronized across devices, data centers, and service provider environments. Built to support large-scale virtualization, multi-tenant security, and rapid policy deployment, this CPU card anchors sophisticated networks with precision timing, robust performance, and seamless integration with Cisco’s NX-OS ecosystem. Whether you’re optimizing cloud platforms, enabling high-frequency trading networks, or delivering carrier-grade interconnects, the Nexus 9400 CPU Card with PTP and SyncE brings the reliability and flexibility your infrastructure requires.

  • High-performance control plane — Designed to accelerate network services, policy enforcement, and virtualization workloads, the CPU card delivers low-latency processing and scalable performance to support growing traffic and complex configurations within the Nexus 9400 family.
  • Industry-leading timing with PTP and SyncE — Featuring Precision Time Protocol (IEEE 1588v2) and Synchronous Ethernet (SyncE) capabilities, this card delivers sub-microsecond synchronization across devices, ensuring accurate timing for distributed applications, data center interconnects, and telecom-grade networks.
  • Seamless Nexus 9400 integration — Specifically designed for the Nexus 9400 chassis, with a hot-swappable form factor, straightforward field upgrades, and minimal disruption to ongoing network operations during maintenance or expansion.
  • Advanced management and observability — Integrates with Cisco NX-OS, DCNM, and telemetry features to provide rich visibility, programmable interfaces, and easy integration with standard network management tools, enabling proactive monitoring and rapid troubleshooting.
  • Reliability, security, and serviceability — Built for mission-critical deployments with fault-tolerant design, secure boot options, and robust operational controls that help protect timing accuracy, policy integrity, and overall network uptime.

Technical Details of Cisco Nexus 9400 CPU Card with PTP, SyncE

  • Model: Cisco Nexus 9400 CPU Card with PTP and SyncE — a dedicated processing module optimized for the Nexus 9400 chassis
  • Chassis compatibility: Designed for Cisco Nexus 9400 Series switches; fits standard Nexus 9400 form factors and hot-swappable slots
  • Timing features: Precision Time Protocol (IEEE 1588v2) with hardware-assisted timestamping and Synchronous Ethernet (SyncE) support for stable, traceable timing distribution
  • Performance characteristics: High-performance control plane processor optimized for large-scale virtualization, policy delivery, and service orchestration
  • Management and visibility: Full NX-OS integration with telemetry, APIs, SNMP, and monitoring compatibility for seamless network operations
  • Availability and resilience: Hot-swappable design with provisions for fault tolerance and graceful failover to minimize downtime during maintenance
  • Security features: Built-in security mechanisms and secure boot support to ensure trusted operation and protect timing integrity

how to install Cisco Nexus 9400 CPU Card with PTP, SyncE

Before installation, ensure you have adequate access to the Nexus 9400 chassis, proper ESD precautions, and confirmed power-down procedures per your data center policy. The following steps provide a safe, straightforward approach to installing the CPU card and enabling its PTP and SyncE timing features.

Step 1: Prepare the chassis and workspace. Power down the Nexus 9400 chassis according to your maintenance window and disconnect all power sources. Open the service access panel and verify you have a clear slot for the CPU card replacement or installation, ensuring there is no obstruction to connectors or fan modules.

Step 2: Identify the correct CPU card slot. Locate the dedicated CPU card slot within the Nexus 9400 chassis. Confirm that the slot is clean, free of debris, and that the connector aligns with the card’s interface. If you are upgrading an existing CPU card, carefully remove the old module following your equipment’s service procedure and set it aside for proper disposal or return.

Step 3: Install the CPU card. Grasp the card by its edges and align it with the slot’s connectors. Insert the card firmly but gently until fully seated, ensuring there is no resistance or misalignment. Use the securing screws or latches provided by Cisco to lock the card in place and prevent movement during operation.

Step 4: Reassemble and power up. Reattach any service panels, reconnect power sources, and power on the Nexus 9400 chassis. Allow the system to complete POST (Power-On Self-Test) and boot into NX-OS. Monitor the status indicators to confirm the card is recognized and operating normally.

Step 5: Configure management access. Access the management plane through your preferred method (console, SSH, or GUI) and verify that the CPU card is visible within the device’s hardware inventory. Confirm firmware versions, boot environment, and that the timing modules are detected as active components within the system.

Step 6: Enable PTP and SyncE timing. Enter global or interface-specific configuration to enable IEEE 1588v2 PTP and SyncE timing on the appropriate timing interfaces or fabric paths. If your deployment uses boundary clocks, transparent clocks, or multiple timing domains, configure the appropriate roles and domain IDs to ensure accurate hierarchical synchronization across the network.

Step 7: Validate timing integrity. Use NX-OS commands to verify PTP status, clock quality, and SyncE stability. Confirm that clock offsets, frequency adjustments, and condition counters are within expected ranges. Run a short timing-awareness test across critical paths to validate end-to-end synchronization for time-sensitive applications.

Step 8: Integrate with management and monitoring tools. Enable telemetry streams and open APIs as needed to feed Cisco DCNM, NetFlow/IP SLA data, and SNMP traps into your network management ecosystem. Establish alerting thresholds for timing drift, lose-packet events, or degradation in synchronization quality to maintain continuous visibility and rapid remediation.

Step 9: Document and test disaster recovery procedures. Record the new timing topology, interface mappings, and failover scenarios. Conduct periodic drills to ensure personnel can restore timing services quickly after hardware faults, firmware updates, or power interruptions.

Step 10: Monitor performance and optimize. Over time, monitor CPU utilization, timing quality metrics, and resynchronization latency. Fine-tune clock domain configurations, QoS policies, and monitoring dashboards to sustain optimal timing accuracy and network performance.

Frequently asked questions

  • What is the main purpose of the Nexus 9400 CPU Card with PTP and SyncE? It provides the central processing power for the Nexus 9400 chassis, while delivering precise time synchronization (PTP) and carrier-grade timing distribution (SyncE) to support demanding data center and telecom applications.
  • What standards does PTP on this card support? The card supports IEEE 1588v2 timing standard, enabling sub-microsecond synchronization across network devices when configured in appropriate clock hierarchies.
  • Is the CPU card hot-swappable? Yes. The design is intended for field replacement with minimal downtime, allowing you to upgrade or swap the card without a complete chassis downtime in many scenarios.
  • Which management tools work with this CPU card? The card is integrated with Cisco NX-OS and can be monitored via Cisco DCNM, along with standard management interfaces (SNMP, telemetry, APIs) supported by the Nexus 9400 platform.
  • How can I validate timing accuracy after installation? Use NX-OS timing commands to check PTP status, clock offsets, and SyncE frequency, then run end-to-end timing tests across critical services to confirm synchronization meets required thresholds.

Customer reviews

(0)

0 Out of 5 Stars


5 Stars
0
4 Stars
0
3 Stars
0
2 Stars
0
1 Star
0


Showing - Of Reviews


You may also like

Recently viewed