Which port is the optical port on the switch

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The SFP port is commonly found on Gigabit Ethernet switches and is primarily used for fiber optic device connections or for uplinking 1G switches to aggregation/core layer devices, providing higher-bandwidth links. Optical ports on switches typically accommodate optical modules for transmitting data via fiber optic cables. A standard Ethernet cable (Cat5/5e/6/6a cable) is often used when connecting two RJ45 ports on Gigabit switches. RJ45 ports serve access-layer copper connections; SFP/SFP+ ports enable flexible 1G/10G uplinks; SFP28 delivers 25G for modern data centers; QSFP+ and QSFP28 support high-density 40G/100G spine–leaf. Learn what an SFP port (SFP slot or SFP interface) is, how it works on a switch, and its role in networking.

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