By default, the PCIe interface will show up as four virtual Ethernet interfaces. Two interfaces in passthrough mode to the 25G SFP28 cages. Remaining two virtual Ethernet-PCIe interfaces are bridged with the Gigabit Ethernet port for management access. The user can configure all interfaces and settings freely since we are running fully functional RouterOS here. To get this CCR device to work as an NIC, a new Passthrough mode was implemented.
Basically, a FastForward FastPath mode that can also pass hardware link statuses. This NIC can reach wire-speed (100Gbps) with Jumbo frames. It ensures that in most server setups this CCR network card will not be the bottleneck. 128 MB of NAND storage, and a. Powerful quad-core ARMv8 64-bit CPU. This device can handle a lot: firewalls, user management and access control for home media and file servers, and even some traffic control in data centers - without the need for a stand-alone router. This form-factor does come with certain limitations that you should keep in mind. The CCR NIC card needs some time to boot up compared to ASIC-based setups. If the host system is up before the CCR card, it will not appear among the available devices.You should add a PCIe device initialization delay after power-up in the BIOS. Or you will need to re-initialize the PCIe devices from the HOST system.
We are looking forward to see your unique use-cases for this unconventional device: a simple high-speed networking card combined with a powerful Cloud Core Router. Unleash the potential of your server with the fierce power of RouterOS!
170 x 69 x 18 mm. Approximately 200'000 hours at 25C. Max power consumption without attachments.
Number of 25G SFP28 ports.