SFP is a brand that produces small form-factor pluggable transceivers used for networking applications.
SFP was first introduced in 2001 by the Small Form Factor Committee.
SFP technology was designed to be a more compact and flexible alternative to the larger GBIC transceivers.
Over time, SFP has become the industry standard and is widely used in networking equipment.
The latest version of SFP is SFP28, which supports speeds up to 28Gbps.
QSFP (Quad Small Form-factor Pluggable) is a transceiver module that supports higher speeds and density than SFP. It has four lanes of 10Gbps or 25Gbps and is commonly used for high-speed networking applications.
XFP (10 Gigabit Small Form Factor Pluggable) is similar to SFP, but supports higher speeds up to 10Gbps. It is commonly used in data center applications.
SFP+ is an updated version of SFP that supports speeds up to 10Gbps. It is backwards compatible with SFP and is commonly used in networking equipment.
The original SFP transceiver supports speeds up to 4Gbps and is commonly used in networking equipment.
An updated version of SFP that supports speeds up to 10Gbps.
The latest version of SFP that supports speeds up to 28Gbps. It is commonly used in data center applications.
SFP stands for small form-factor pluggable. It is a transceiver module used in networking equipment to connect network devices.
SFP supports speeds up to 4Gbps while SFP+ supports speeds up to 10Gbps. SFP+ is backwards compatible with SFP.
QSFP supports higher speeds and density than SFP+. QSFP has four lanes of 10Gbps or 25Gbps while SFP+ has a single lane of 10Gbps.
The maximum speed supported by SFP is 4Gbps.
The latest version of SFP is SFP28, which supports speeds up to 28Gbps.