Typically, core switches are Layer 3 switches equipped with robust network management capabilities. They are characterized by numerous ports and high bandwidth, offering greater reliability, redundancy, throughput, and lower latency compared to access and aggregation switches. The data routed and switched by the core switch is carried forward to the bottom layers of the. The campus local area network (LAN) is the network that supports devices people use within a location to connect to information. The use of the word campus does not imply any specific geographic size or organizational boundary—the campus LAN can range in size from a single switch at a small remote. The Interconnect PIN (Tier 4) is an extension of the Core, used to connect multiple Core layers (areas) and/or other network domains. Sitting at the top of the hierarchical model, core switches interconnect distribution layer switches and provide high-speed data transfer across. A core switch is a high-capacity, high-performance Layer 3 switch positioned at the physical backbone of an enterprise network.
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