Carrier Routing System

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Carrier Routing System is a large-scale core router, developed by Cisco Systems, Inc.. It runs IOS XR which is a train of IOS built upon the QNX microkernel. A single chassis holds a maximum of 16 line cards, and can run an OC-768 SONET interface. The system has the capability for combining multiple line card chassis using separate dedicated fabric chassis, allowing one system to replace a cluster of Internet core routers in a single site. In this multi-chassis configuration, each line card chassis (LCC) is connected over multiple fabric switching planes with one or more fabric card chassis (FCC). The chassis interconnections are achieved with PAROLI (parallel optical link) fiber optic bundles.

A fully populated CRS contains over 1000 linecards at 40Gb/s each. Can scale to 92Tb/s bandwidth. To maintain linespeed on all interfaces the internal bandwidth is many times this.

In both single- and multi-chassis configurations, the CRS-1 switch fabrics are based on a three-stage Benes architecture. In a single-chassis system, the three switching stages--S1, S2, and S3--are all contained on one fabric card. In a multi-chassis system, the S2 stage is contained within the FCCs, with the S1 and S3 stages resident in the LCCs at the egress and ingress interfaces fabric plane interfaces, respectively.

While the device was in development, it was known by the code name of HFR, or Huge Fucking Router, and thats what it is. The marketing group later maintained this actually meant Huge Fast Router.[1]

Image:CroppedCRS.jpg

[edit] References

  1. ^ News.com article referring to the CRS-1 as the HFR

[edit] External links