ADAPTER XXV710-DA2 FOR OCP/SINGLE RETAIL

Cod Produs: ILXXV710DA2OCP1 Categorie:

Flexible Port Partitioning (FPP) technology utilizes industry standard PCI SIG SR-IOV to efficiently divide your physical Ethernet device into multiple virtual devices, providing Quality of Service by ensuring each process is assigned to a Virtual Function and is provided a fair share of the bandwidth. Single-Root I/O Virtualization (SR-IOV) involves natively (directly) sharing a single I/O resource between multiple virtual machines. SR-IOV provides a mechanism by which a Single Root Function (for example a single Ethernet Port) can appear to be multiple separate physical devices.

Additional information

Ethernet LAN (RJ-45) ports

Compatible operating systems

Fiber ports quantity

Ethernet LAN data rates

Storage temperature (T-T)

Maximum operating distance

Harmonized System (HS) code

Internal

Certification

Product series

Host interface

Power consumption (typical)

Operating temperature (T-T)

Interface

iSCSI support

Connectivity technology

PCI-SIG* SR-IOV Capable

PCI version

Maximum data transfer rate

Fiber optic connector

Interface type

Launch date

Storage relative humidity (H-H)

Product family

Network interface card type

Bracket height

iWARP/RDMA

Speed & slot width

Processor family

Storage Over Ethernet

Product type

Product brief URL

Cabling type

Intelligent Offloads

Status

Ethernet adapter ARK ID

Market segment

Cable type

Low halogen options available

Last change

Form factor

Target market

Data transfer rate

Flexible Port Partitioning (FPP) technology utilizes industry standard PCI SIG SR-IOV to efficiently divide your physical Ethernet device into multiple virtual devices, providing Quality of Service by ensuring each process is assigned to a Virtual Function and is provided a fair share of the bandwidth.

Single-Root I/O Virtualization (SR-IOV) involves natively (directly) sharing a single I/O resource between multiple virtual machines. SR-IOV provides a mechanism by which a Single Root Function (for example a single Ethernet Port) can appear to be multiple separate physical devices.