The power management feature for Juniper Networks EX6200 Ethernet Switches and Juniper Networks EX8200 Ethernet Switches helps ensure that normal operation of the system is not disrupted because of insufficient power to the switch. For example:
Power management manages power to switch components by employing a power budget policy. In its power budget policy, power management:
You can configure certain aspects of power management’s budget policy, specifically:
These configurable items are discussed further in:
The power priority of line cards determines:
![]() | Note: On EX6200 switches, the four 10-Gigabit Ethernet SFP+ uplink ports on a Switch Fabric and Routing Engine (SRE) module are treated like a line card in the power budget. |
This section covers:
Using the CLI, you can assign a explicit power priority to a line-card slot. If more than one slot has the same assigned priority, the power priority is determined by slot number, with the lowest-numbered slots receiving power first.
By default, all slots in an EX8200 switch are assigned the lowest priority. Thus if you do not explicitly assign priorities to slots, power priority is determined by slot number, with slot 0 having the highest priority.
In an EX6200 switch, all slots are assigned the lowest priority, except for the slots containing an SRE module. Slots containing an SRE module are automatically assigned the highest priority. This means that the line cards that represent the 10-Gigabit Ethernet SFP+ ports on SRE modules have the highest priority among the line cards.
When an EX6200 or EX8200 switch is powered on, power management allocates power to components according to its power budget policy. After power management has allocated power to the base chassis components, it allocates the remaining available power to the line cards. It powers on the line cards in priority order until all line cards are powered on or the available power (including reserved power, if necessary) is exhausted. Thus if available power is exhausted before all line cards receive power, higher-priority cards are powered on while lower-priority cards remain powered off.
A lower-priority card might receive power while a higher-priority card does not if the remaining available power is sufficient to power on the lower-priority card but not the higher-priority card. For example, if a line card requiring 450 W is in a higher-priority slot than line card requiring 330 W, the line card requiring 330 W receives the power if there is less than 450 W but more than 330 W remaining in the power budget.
Line cards that have been administratively taken offline are not allocated power.
![]() | Note: Because power management does not allocate power to a line card that has been administratively taken offline, a line card that has been taken offline in an EX6200 or EX8200 switch is not automatically brought online when you commit a configuration. You must explicitly use the request chassis fpc slot slot-number online command to bring a line card online that was taken offline previously. This behavior differs from other platforms running Juniper Networks Junos operating system (Junos OS), which automatically bring an offline FPC online when you commit a configuration. |
If power management cannot power on a line card because of insufficient power, it raises a major (red) alarm.
After all line cards have been powered on, power management allocates any remaining available power, including reserved power, to the PoE power budgets of line cards that have PoE ports. Power management allocates PoE power to line cards in the order of power priority. If enough power is available, a line card receives its full PoE power budget before power management allocates PoE power to the next highest-priority line card. If not enough power is available, a line card receives partial PoE power and lower-priority line cards receive no PoE power.
If power management is unable to allocate enough power to meet the PoE power budget for a line card, it logs a message to the system log.
The default PoE power budget for a line card is the amount of power needed to supply the maximum supported power to all PoE ports. In cases where powered devices do not require the maximum power or in which some PoE ports are not used for powered devices, you can configure a smaller PoE power budget for a line card. By configuring a smaller PoE power budget, you make more power available for the PoE power budgets of lower-priority line cards.
You can also configure the power priority of the PoE ports on a line card. If power management is unable to allocate enough power to a line card to meet its PoE power budget, the line card PoE controller will turn off power to PoE ports in reverse priority order as required to meet the reduced power allocation.
See Configuring PoE (CLI Procedure) for more information on how to configure the PoE power budget for a line card and how to configure PoE port priorities.
In an operating switch, power management dynamically reallocates power in response to changes in power availability or demand or changes in line card priority. Power management uses line card priority to determine how to reallocate power in response to the following events:
If, because of insufficient power, power management reduces or eliminates the PoE power budget for a line card, it logs a message to the system log. If power management must power down a line card because of insufficient power, it raises a major (red) alarm.
By default, power management in EX6200 and EX8200 switches is configured to manage the power supplies for N+1 redundancy, in which one power supply is held in reserve for backup if one of the other power supplies is removed or fails.
You can configure power management to manage the power supplies for N+N redundancy. In N+N redundancy, power management holds N power supplies in reserve for backup. For example, if your switch has six power supplies and you configure N+N redundancy, power management makes three power supplies available for normal operating power and reserves three power supplies for redundancy (3+3). If you have an odd number of power supplies, power management allocates one more power supply to normal operating power than to redundant power. For example, if you have five power supplies, the N+N configuration is 3+2.
Given the same number of power supplies, an N+N configuration usually provides less normal operating power than an N+1 configuration because the N+N configuration holds more power in reserve for backup. Table 1 shows the effect on normal operating power in N+1 and N+N configurations.
Table 1: Available Operating Power in N+1 and N+N Redundancy Configurations
Number of Power Supplies at n W Each | Normal Operating Power in N+1 Configuration | Normal Operating Power in N+N Configuration |
|---|---|---|
2 | 1 x (n W) | 1 x (n W) |
3 | 2 x (n W) | 2 x (n W) |
4 | 3 x (n W) | 2 x (n W) |
5 (EX8200 switches only) | 4 x (n W) | 3 x (n W) |
6 (EX8200 switches only) | 5 x (n W) | 3 x (n W) |
To compensate for the reduced normal operating power, power management on EX8200 switches allocates less power to the chassis in an N+N configuration than in an N+1 configuration. This reduction in allocated chassis power allows a switch in an N+N configuration to power more line cards than it could without the reduction. For the EX8208 switch, the power allocated for the chassis is reduced to 1200 W from 1600 W; for the EX8216 switch, it is reduced to 1800 W from 2400 W.
![]() | Note: To achieve the reduction in allocated chassis power in an EX8200 switch, power management reduces the maximum fan speed to 60 percent in an N+N configuration from 80 percent in an N+1 configuration. Because the maximum fan speed is reduced, it is possible that a line card that overheats would be shut down sooner in an N+N configuration than in an N+1 configuration. |
On EX6200 switches, the same amount of power is allocated for the chassis in N+N configurations as in N+1 configurations.
Power management automatically recalculates the reserved power and normal operating power as power supplies go online or offline. For example, if you have an N+N configuration with three online 2000 W power supplies, power management allocates 2000 W to reserved power. If you bring a fourth 2000 W power supply online, power management then allocates 4000 W to reserved power. If a power supply goes offline again, power management once again allocates 2000 W to reserved power.
When power is insufficient to meet the budgeted power requirements, power management raises alarms as follows:
Power management clears all alarms when sufficient power is available to meet normal operating and reserved power requirements.