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High Availability

High Availability Networking

Enterprises and Governments around the world increasingly depend on mission-critical applications for vital business functions. Some examples of these applications include order-entry, transaction processing, customer service, and billing. In addition, emerging next-generation applications like IP telephony and instant messaging offer unparalleled efficiency, flexibility, and ease.

The IP-centric nature of these applications requires a High Availability Network. Outages prevent access to critical applications and can have a significant impact on productivity and profitability.

Cisco offers a comprehensive solution to High Availability Networking (HAN) that minimizes network outages and ensures non-stop access to the most mission-critical applications. Cisco HAN takes a network-wide approach, delivering the most cohesive and collaborative solution to maintain high network availability. It combines:

  • Reinforced Network Infrastructure
  • Real World Network Design
  • Realigned Network Operations
  • Real-Time Network Management
  • Relentless Network Support

Cisco's History of Leadership in High Availability Networking:

  • First implementation of Non-Stop Forwarding with Stateful Switchover
  • First Router (Cisco 12000) with zero packet loss when failing over from one Route Processor to another.
  • Invented the Hot Standby Router Protocol and the Gateway Load Balancing Protocol for first-hop redundancy.
  • Only Technical Assistance Center with the knowledge base, tools, documentation, and online communities to resolve 78% of all cases online without having to first talk to an engineer.
  • Optimized the OSPF, BGP, and IS-IS Routing Protocols with enhancements to significantly lower convergence times.
  • Pioneered the Port Aggregation Group Protocol to bundle ports into an Etherchannel, led to IEEE LACP.
  • Pioneered Spanning Tree Protocol extensions with innovations like Portfast, Uplinkfast, and Backbonefast to minimize convergence times. Led to IEEE 802.1w and 802.1s.
  • Only Stackable Ethernet switch (Catalyst 3750) to support 1:N redundancy.
  • Only System with hitless In-Service HW and SW upgrades and fault isolation by process/subsystem/service
  • Only self healing Operating System for multi-shelf Carrier Infrastructure (CRS)