Which port is the optical port on the switch
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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