Common use of Loopback (Optional) Clause in Contracts

Loopback (Optional). The CFP2 module may optionally support loopback functionality. The capability to support the loopback functionality is dependent upon the interface IC technology, labeled as “Interface IC(s)” in the figure below. Recommended loopback orientation implementation is TX0 to RX0. The host loopback and the network loopback are oriented per Figure 4-2 shown below. The CFP MSA module vendor will specify which loopback functionality, if any, is supported. For details on controlling the loopback mode, please refer to Reference [7]. In optional loopback, TXn is looped back to RXn, for example TX0+ to RX0+, on both host and network side. Figure 4-2: CFP2 Module Optional Loopback Orientation

Appears in 3 contracts

Samples: www.gigalight.com, www.prolabs.com, www.fluxlight.com

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Loopback (Optional). The CFP2 module may optionally support loopback functionality. The capability to support the loopback functionality is dependent upon the interface IC technology, labeled as “Interface IC(s)” in the figure below. Recommended loopback orientation implementation is TX0 to RX0. The host loopback and the network loopback are oriented per Figure 4-2 shown below. The CFP MSA module vendor will specify which loopback functionality, if any, is supported. For details on controlling the loopback mode, please refer to Reference [7]. In optional loopback, TXn is looped back to RXn, for example TX0+ to RX0+, on both host and network side. Figure 4-24‐2: CFP2 Module Optional Loopback Orientation

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: pdf4pro.com

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Loopback (Optional). The CFP2 module may optionally support loopback functionality. The capability to support the loopback functionality is dependent upon the interface IC technology, labeled as “Interface IC(s)” in the figure below. Recommended loopback orientation implementation is TX0 to RX0. The host loopback and the network loopback are oriented per Figure 4-2 shown below. The CFP MSA module vendor will specify which loopback functionality, if any, is supported. For details on controlling the loopback mode, please refer to Reference [7]. In optional loopback, TXn is looped back to RXn, for example TX0+ to RX0+, on both host and network side. Figure 4-2: CFP2 Module Optional Loopback Orientation

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: www.cfp-msa.org

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