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Home > Support > Technical Documentation > MX Series Routers > MX240 Router Hardware > MX240 Routing Engine Description
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Supported Platforms

  • MX240 Routers
 
 

Related Documentation

  • MX Series
  • MX240 Routing Engine LEDs
  • Removing an MX240 Routing Engine
  • Installing an MX240 Routing Engine
  • MX240 Routing Engine Serial Number Label
 
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MX240 Routing Engine Description

The Routing Engine is an Intel-based PC platform that runs Junos OS. Software processes that run on the Routing Engine maintain the routing tables, manage the routing protocols used on the router, control the router interfaces, control some chassis components, and provide the interface for system management and user access to the router.

You can install one or two Routing Engines in the router. The Routing Engines install into the front of the chassis in horizontal slots in the SCBs labeled 0 and 1/0. Each Routing Engine must be installed directly into an SCB. A USB port on the Routing Engine accepts a USB memory card that allows you to load Junos OS.

If two Routing Engines are installed, one functions as the master and the other acts as the backup. If the master Routing Engine fails or is removed and the backup is configured appropriately, the backup takes over as the master. The Backup Routing Engine is hot-insertable and hot-removable.

The MX240 router supports the RE-S-1300-2048, EE-S-2000-4096, and RE-S-1800 Routing Engines.

Note: If two Routing Engines are installed, they must both be the same hardware model.

Figure 1: Routing Engine

Image g004013.gif

Figure 2: RE-S-1800

Image g006038.gif

Routing Engine Components

Note: For specific information about Routing Engine components (for example, the amount of DRAM), issue the show chassis routing-engine command.

Routing Engine Interface Ports

Three ports, located on the right side of the routing engine, connect the Routing Engine to one or more external devices on which system administrators can issue Junos OS command-line interface (CLI) commands to manage the router (see Figure 1).

The ports with the indicated labels function as follows:

  • AUX—Connects the Routing Engine to a laptop, modem, or other auxiliary device through a serial cable with an RJ-45 connector.
  • CONSOLE—Connects the Routing Engine to a system console through a serial cable with an RJ-45 connector.
  • ETHERNET—Connects the Routing Engine through an Ethernet connection to a management LAN (or any other device that plugs into an Ethernet connection) for out-of-band management. The port uses an autosensing RJ-45 connector to support 10-Mbps or 100-Mbps connections. Two small LEDs on the right of the port indicate the connection in use: the LED labeled ETHERNET lights yellow or green for a 10-Mbps or 100-Mbps connection, and the LED labeled ACT lights green when traffic is passing through the port.

Routing Engine Boot Sequence

The Routing Engine boots from the storage media in this order: the USB device (if present), then the CompactFlash card, then the hard disk, then the LAN. The disk from which the router boots is called the primary boot device, and the other disk is the alternate boot device.

Note: If the router boots from an alternate boot device, a yellow alarm lights the LED on the router’s craft interface.

 

Related Documentation

  • MX Series
  • MX240 Routing Engine LEDs
  • Removing an MX240 Routing Engine
  • Installing an MX240 Routing Engine
  • MX240 Routing Engine Serial Number Label
 

Published: 2011-02-25

 
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