Spine and Leaf network architecture explained | ccna 200-301

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  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2025

Комментарии • 60

  • @aliciamarques3743
    @aliciamarques3743 3 года назад +8

    Best explanation of spine-leaf I've seen. I was having trouble understanding but now it makes sense...thank you!

  • @liquidninja6654
    @liquidninja6654 3 года назад +12

    Omg you actually made it so easy to understand! Most network engineers skip the obvious and assume everyone is an expert. Bravo.

  • @juliotableta-android2061
    @juliotableta-android2061 5 месяцев назад +1

    Quick and concise explanation. Thank you!

  • @gustavonascimento5052
    @gustavonascimento5052 2 года назад +2

    Quick and concise explanation. Thank you!👍🏻

  • @frzen
    @frzen Год назад +3

    Thank you for including the wan... no other video shows where the wan connection is in spine-leaf. The bit I don't understand is when it's bigger than a small datacentre... if you have 40 spines your rack switches would need 40 ports just to reach the spines. But 4 spines makes perfect sense just connect your top of rack switches to the 4 spines each

  • @DJDAntoine
    @DJDAntoine 3 года назад

    Excellent breakdown, to the point without adding alot of buzz words.

  • @vicg5323
    @vicg5323 2 года назад +2

    Very clear explanation

  • @mundheryousif85
    @mundheryousif85 3 года назад +1

    Wow nice, easy and clear explanation Thanks for that keep it up

  • @thorenjohn
    @thorenjohn 2 года назад +1

    Good explanation and really skillful use of graphics and icons!

  • @vijayareddy8847
    @vijayareddy8847 4 года назад +2

    Simple and Clear.

  • @aymaneelansari6183
    @aymaneelansari6183 3 года назад +3

    Thank you sir, well explained and easy to follow.

  • @standinganimals6883
    @standinganimals6883 4 года назад +1

    Excellent video. Thank you!

  • @happyuk06
    @happyuk06 2 года назад

    Great presentation. Have an upvote.

  • @raghavendrabs8936
    @raghavendrabs8936 3 года назад

    Superbly Explained, Short and very informative. Thanks so much🙏

  • @ThemenschMusic
    @ThemenschMusic Год назад

    Superb vid, thank you!

  • @evancrosley2857
    @evancrosley2857 Год назад

    Thank you. Great video

  • @cleversonsantos7551
    @cleversonsantos7551 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for sharing knowledge!

  • @nadjaweil2410
    @nadjaweil2410 4 года назад +2

    Really good video, easy to understand!

  • @hassanbilal6169
    @hassanbilal6169 4 года назад +2

    Very well explained

  • @PavanKumar-os4iq
    @PavanKumar-os4iq Год назад

    Kept it simple and good explanation

  • @c_sid
    @c_sid 3 года назад

    Nicely explained 👍

  • @hamzacod8178
    @hamzacod8178 2 года назад

    Love it.

  • @Muthuraj-ys6dl
    @Muthuraj-ys6dl 2 года назад

    Good explanation can you pls put more videos about ACI its very very useful for us.. marvelous explanation

  • @SheikAbdulKaleem
    @SheikAbdulKaleem Год назад

    How will you build campus network using Spine and leaf as there will be too many cables, If there are 10 buildings it can be nightmare. How does this work in such a scenario ? Kindly guide me if you have any video on that.

  • @muhammadburhan9842
    @muhammadburhan9842 4 года назад +1

    Very nice explained

  • @reginaldopires4982
    @reginaldopires4982 Год назад

    Obrigado!!!

  • @rkbwebmaster
    @rkbwebmaster Год назад

    how full mesh ?

  • @laserspud
    @laserspud 2 года назад +1

    Hi I would like to ask. Can this architecture be used for a network campus? and if so, where would devices such as laptop be placed? would it be attached to one of the switches? thk in advance :)

    • @networkingwithh4716
      @networkingwithh4716  2 года назад

      It is a nice question... Spine and leaf are mostly used by data center networks. laptops are connected to Access network through Wi-Fi or lan Switch

    • @laserspud
      @laserspud 2 года назад

      @@networkingwithh4716 oh i see, thk for answering my qns 😄 im trying to make a campus network but i’ll stick with a 2 tier topology. That video u made on 2 tier topology was very good btw, understood it very easily 😁

  • @mickaelf-b2937
    @mickaelf-b2937 Год назад

    Hi, EoR stands for End of Row not End of Rack.

  • @evolagenda
    @evolagenda 2 года назад

    Can you talk more about the concept of top or rack switch?

  • @jorgesotomartinez4656
    @jorgesotomartinez4656 3 года назад

    thks!!

  • @indrajittalukdar4904
    @indrajittalukdar4904 3 года назад +1

    Hi, can you explain a bit about the non -blocking fabric. If there is no interconnection between leafs and spines themselves will create a non-blocking switch ? how ?

    • @networkingwithh4716
      @networkingwithh4716  3 года назад +2

      That is a good question...
      Non-blocking means that each port is capable of sending and receiving traffic at the maximum speed to and from any other port

  • @Luvcuttte
    @Luvcuttte 9 дней назад

    THANK YOUUUU

    • @networkingwithh4716
      @networkingwithh4716  7 дней назад

      Check out my full CCNA course with training videos , practice labs ,quizzes and practice exams.
      On My personal webpage
      learnwithnetworkingwithh.graphy.com/courses/CISCO-CCNA-200-301-63ea2b6ae4b090a146306bcf
      On udemy
      www.udemy.com/course/ccna-v11-200-301-video-training-course-2024/?referralCode=2DF7526C408423A5485A

  • @kayazar5387
    @kayazar5387 4 года назад +1

    Hi sir, is two-tier architecture and spine-leaf architecture same?

    • @networkingwithh4716
      @networkingwithh4716  4 года назад +1

      They are not same.
      One of the major difference i see is you can use layer 3 routing between spine and leaf in spine and leaf architecture.
      Any traffic between two nodes is just one hop away and it uses full available bandwidth.
      where as collapsed core or 2-tier hierarchical model is limited to spanning tree and vPC. which might not allow us to use full available bandwidth.

    • @kayazar5387
      @kayazar5387 4 года назад

      @@networkingwithh4716 Thank you sir, what about the cost which one is cheap?

    • @networkingwithh4716
      @networkingwithh4716  4 года назад

      @@kayazar5387 cost depends on what devices you choose to use..modern networks specially data centers prefer leaf and spine.

  • @Secretsauceeee
    @Secretsauceeee 4 года назад

    Hi sir, noob question, what is the difference between a collapse core and a spine-leaf?

    • @networkingwithh4716
      @networkingwithh4716  4 года назад +1

      One of the major difference i see is you can use layer 3 routing between spine and leaf architecture.
      Any traffic between two nodes is just one hop away and it uses full available bandwidth.
      where as collapsed core or 2-tier hierarchical model is limited to spanning tree and vPC. which might not allow us to use full available bandwidth.

  • @anantgaonkar941
    @anantgaonkar941 2 года назад

    Made it simpler!