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Layer 3 Vs Router

Hi..

I am new in this field.

How a Layer 3 switch is technically different from a Router?

11 Replies 11

Jon Marshall
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame

The main difference is that a L3 switch does L3 forwarding in hardware and a router does L3 forwarding in software.

That said there are hardware routers as well so the lines are more blurred than they used to be.

In addtion there are a lot of functional differences eg. routers generally have more QOS capabilities, can do NAT (which most switches can't), can terminate more media types, can do IPSEC etc. etc.

L3 switches are primarily used when you have a number of vlans and you want to route between them. Compared to a software router they have much higher throughput. Some of the higher end switches do have more L3 functionality but they generally still don't have as much as a router. 

Jon

Hi...

Thanx 4 d reply...It was very helpful.

can u help me related with port security issue..kindly follow the below link.

https://supportforums.cisco.com/discussion/12197626/mac-address-not-getting-sticked

Regards.

Joseph W. Doherty
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame

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Posting

A router is a router because the vendor so labels it and a L3 switch is a L3 switch because the vendor so labels it.  wink

As Jon also notes, L3 switches generally have more hardware dedicated to packet forwarding (often very Ethernet only oriented) while routers usually have a much richer feature set and/or media support, but the line is blurred.

I've worked with some vendor X equipment labeled SSR (for smart switch router), so even vendors can blur the line.

Years ago, the 6500 and 7600 could use not only the same sups and some of the same line cards, they ran the same IOS image!  However the 6500 was a "L3 switch" and the 7600 was a "router".  The did differ, as the 6500 supported service modules that the 7600 didn't, while the 7600 supported special WAN cards that the 6500 didn't.  Personally, I suspected the difference was more due to vendor marketing then what could be done technically.

I've worked with some vendor X equipment labeled SSR (for smart switch router)

Enteresys.  Ahhhh ... Nostalgia.

Laugh - actually also before the spinoff/split.  I.e. vendor names on the box didn't (yet) start with an "E".

Cabletron.  Shows your age, Joe.  laugh

5 points for correct answer(s).  (I.e. vendors and my age - laugh)
 

Darn.  Those SSR were really good.  

I thought they were impressive for their time.  I still (personally) have four SSR-2000s.

LOL.  

Hi...

Thanx 4 d reply...It was very helpful.

can u help me related with port security issue..kindly follow the below link.

https://supportforums.cisco.com/discussion/12197626/mac-address-not-getting-sticked

Regards.

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