how to differentiate routers and switches

einstein1

Junior Member
May 26, 2005
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hi,
I am a network analyst...jus started my career....
I am finding it difficult to co relate the series with switches and routers....
This mite sound silly....but I wonder cisco should have had something in mind before giving these sumbers ...rite ?
Could someone explain the funda ?

Regards
 

Cooky

Golden Member
Apr 2, 2002
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Not sure what exactly you're asking...you mean how can you tell if a device is a switch or router just by looking at the model number??
If you work for a while you'll just know...like the most recent LAN switches are 2950, 3560, 4500, and 6550's.
 

qaa541

Senior member
Jun 25, 2004
397
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If you look at the switches, the switches typically say "Catalyst ####" (# = a digit), and the routers just say a number ####(no model name). Anytime you see Catalyst, that means it's a switch.
 

einstein1

Junior Member
May 26, 2005
5
0
0
Hi All,
My sincere thanks to cooky , qaa54 and spidey07.
I involve in remote logging always.
So , I never have a chance to know abt prefix" catalyst" in case of switches.
I get a list of devices(usually in 100s) names and its series.
After a while , I kept loggin into devices without caring much abt the series....
Just sometime before , i realised that , series and the devices features does matter...
hence wanted to know !!

Anyway, i got good info from u guys. BIG Thanks.

Looking forward for more answers for my silly q's

 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
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That's where a good naming convention comes in handy.

I always put the model in the hostname.

For example...

TX-6509C01-DC

Texas office, 6509 switch (core 01) located in data center.

Also generally "show version" will give you the model and if it is running router or switching software.