Cisco CCNA Certification: Cisco Switching Modes Tutorial
To pass the CCNA exam and earn that coveted certification,
you've got to know Cisco switches inside and out. Among the many
important details you've got to know are the three methods that
Cisco switches use to forward frames, and the differences
between the three.
The first switching method is Store-and-Forward. The name is the
recipe, because that's just what the switch does - it stores the
entire frame before beginning to forward it. This method allows
for the greatest amount of error checking, since the Frame Check
Sequence (FCS) can be run before the frame is forwarded. As
always, there is a tradeoff, since this error checking process
makes this the slowest of the three frame forwarding methods.
The quickest method is Cut-Through, where only the destination
MAC address of the frame is examined before the forwarding
process begins. This means that the part of the frame is
actually being forwarded as it is still being received! The
tradeoff here is that the FCS does not run, so there is
absolutely no error checking with Cut-Through switching.
The middle ground between these two extremes is Fragment-Free,
so named since fragmented frames will not be forwarded. The
switch examines only the first 64 bytes of the frame for errors,
since that is the part of the frame that will be damaged in case
of a collision. There is error checking, but it is not as
thorough as Store-and-Forward.
Keeping these three switching schemes straight is vital to your
CCNA exam efforts, and it will help you in working with Cisco
switches in the real world as well. Keep studying!