Feature |
Product |
Release introduced |
---|---|---|
Energy Saver |
5420 Series |
VOSS 8.4 Switch models: 5420F-24T-4XE, 5420F-24P-4XE, 5420F-48T-4XE, 5420F-48P-4XE, 5420F-48P-4XL, 5420F-8W-16P-4XE, 5420F-16W-32P-4XE, 5420F-16MW-32P-4XE, 5420M-24W-4YE, 5420M-48W-4YE, 5420M-24T-4YE, 5420M-48T-4YE, 5420M-16MW-32P-4YE |
5520 Series |
VOSS 8.2.5 All fixed ports on 5520-24T, 5520-24W, 5520-48T, 5520-48W, and 5520-12MW-36W |
|
VSP 4450 Series |
VOSS 7.0 |
|
VSP 4900 Series |
VOSS 8.1 VSP4900-48P and ports 1/1 to 1/12 onVSP4900-12MXU-12XE only |
|
VSP 7200 Series |
VOSS 7.0 VSP 7254XTQ only |
|
VSP 7400 Series |
Not Supported |
|
VSP 8200 Series |
Not Supported |
|
VSP 8400 Series |
VOSS 7.0 |
|
VSP 8600 Series |
Not Supported |
|
XA1400 Series |
Not Supported |
To redure direct power consumption by up to 40%, Energy Saver uses intelligent-switching capacity reduction in off-peak mode by controlling port link speeds and optionally powering off low priority PoE devices during off-peak periods. You can schedule Energy Saver to activate during multiple specific time periods. These time periods can be as short as one minute, or can last a week, a weekend, or individual days.
Note
Energy Saver is supported only on copper ports that have auto-negotiation enabled on them.
If auto-negotiation is disabled on a port and a custom port speed is configured, Energy Saver will not change the speed of that port.
Important
Configuring the port link speed to a low value impacts the overall network performance. The best practice is to use the Energy Saver feature during the hours when the network is not overburdened.
If a switch is reset while Energy Saver is activated, the PoE power-saving calculation might not accurately reflect the power saving, and in some cases might display zero savings. This problem occurs because the switch did not have sufficient time to record PoE usage between the reset of the switch and the reactivation of Energy Saver. When Energy Saver is next activated, the PoE power saving calculation is correctly updated.
When Energy Saver is active and you replace a unit, that unit will not be in Energy Saver mode. You must configure Energy Saver directly after replacing a unit.
Energy Saver can use Power over Ethernet (PoE) port-power priority levels to shut down low-priority PoE ports and provide power savings. The power consumption savings of each switch is determined by the number of ports with Energy Saver enabled, and by the power consumption of PoE ports that are powered off. If Energy Saver is disabled on a port, the port is not powered off, irrespective of the PoE configuration. Energy Saver turns off the power to a port only when PoE is enabled globally, the port Energy Saver is enabled, and the PoE priority for the port is configured to Low.
To fully configure and use Energy Saver, you must first enable Energy Saver on ports, create a schedule, and then enable Energy Saver globally.
Alternatively, you can configure Energy Saver using the Efficiency Mode quick configuration method, which enables Energy Saver on all ports, creates a default schedule, and enables Energy Saver globally.
You can manually deactivate and reactivate Energy Saver at any time, without affecting the port configurations.
Note
Energy Saver is supported only on copper ports that have auto-negotiation enabled.
Network Time Protocol (NTP) must be enabled and configured to use Energy Saver.