| Feature | Support | | :--- | :--- | | | Up to 255 VLANs (1–4094, but only 255 active) | | Spanning Tree | PVST+, Rapid PVST+, MST | | Security | 802.1x (port-based authentication), MAC address filtering, DHCP Snooping, Dynamic ARP Inspection (DAI) — Note: DAI requires sufficient TCAM space, which this image manages well | | Management | SSHv2, SNMPv3, Syslog, TFTP/FTP upgrades | | QoS | 4 egress queues per port; classification based on CoS, DSCP, or ACL | | Multicast | IGMP snooping (v1, v2, v3) | | Max Interfaces | 48 FastEthernet + 4 Gigabit uplinks (typical) |
Switch# copy tftp://192.168.1.100/c2960-lanbasek9-mz.150-2.SE11.bin flash: Switch# boot system flash:c2960-lanbasek9-mz.150-2.SE11.bin Switch# write memory Switch# reload Because this image is still widely circulated on forums and file archives, many hobbyists try to flash it onto mismatched hardware. Here are the frequent pitfalls: C2960-lanbasek9-mz.122-44.se6.bin
For network engineers who cut their teeth on IOS (Internetwork Operating System) in the late 2000s and early 2010s, this filename triggers immediate recognition. It represents stability, security (via K9 encryption), and the end of an era for Layer 2 switching. | Feature | Support | | :--- |
This article unpacks every fragment of that filename, explores its technical specifications, examines its security implications in the modern era, and explains why you still encounter this binary on legacy networks today. Before you download or deploy this file, you must understand the Cisco IOS naming convention. This is not random text; it is a precise blueprint of the software. This article unpacks every fragment of that filename,
