> On Jan 31, 2022, at 8:02 PM, Randy Carpenter <rcar...@network1.net> wrote:
> 
> 
> Are you talking about an SFP28 module that can link at 25Gb, but also 1Gb?
> 
> We just put 1Gb SFPs in the SFP28 ports and they work fine. I have not seen a 
> single module that does both, but admittedly, I have not looked too hard, as 
> the 1Gb modules are so cheap.
> 
> Or, are you talking about a module that presents as 25Gb to the switch, but 
> 1Gb to the client device?

The latter.

I remember there were two kinds of copper SFPs: cheap ones, which would talk 1G 
on both sides, and expensive ones which would talk 1G on the switch/router 
side, and 10M/100M/1G on the client side.

There seem to be similar kids of copper SFP+, though I haven’t actually tested 
them:

    
https://www.discomp.eu/mikrotik-rj45-sfp-10-100-1000m-2-5g-5g-10g-metalicky-modul_d82667.html
    
https://datainterfaces.com/sfp-1000-rj45-10gbase-t-copper-sfp-transceiver-module-cisco-ready/
    
https://www.prolineoptions.com/dell-sfp-10g-t-de-pro-100-1000-10000base-tx-sfp-plus-transceiver-copper-30m
    https://www.blackbox.be/en-be/i/14164/SFP+,10-Gbps,RJ-45/
    
https://www.bestbuy.ca/en-ca/product/startech-hp-jl563a-compatible-sfp-module-10-100-1000-10000-copper-transceiver-jl563a-st/14208481

Those seem like they might talk 10G on the switch/router side, and 
10M/100M/1G/2.5G/5G/10G on the client side.  Or it might be that they establish 
whatever link speed they can on the client side, and then try to signal the 
switch/router side to adapt to that rate; which seems possible but improbable.  
Or it might be that they accept whatever speed the swich/router side tells them 
it’s running at, and then only provide link at that rate on the client side; 
again, possible but seems improbable.  I haven’t actually taken any of these 
into the lab to test them, anyway.  And those are 10G on the switch/router 
side, and I’m curious whether anybody knows of one that goes 25G/10G/1G on the 
switch/router side, and 1G (specifically) on the client side.

I don’t actually want the SFP28, I just need to find a chip that does that in 
the size/power budget of an SFP, and it seemed like the easiest way to do that 
would be to find an SFP28 that did what I needed and bust it open to see what 
chip they were using.

I’m sure you can guess why, given recent threads.  :-)

                                -Bill

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