Tag Archive for Ethernet

Terabit Ethernet Developing

Terabit Ethernet DevelopingResearchers at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) are working on the next evolution of Ethernet – Terabit Ethernet. UCSB Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Dan Blumenthal told LightReading that the goal of the recently created Terabit Optical Ethernet Center (TOEC), is to create Terabit Ethernet (TbE) which runs at 1 trillion bits per second by 2015 and to follow it up with 100Tbit/s Ethernet by 2020.

Professor Blumenthal explained to LightReading that he wants the TOEC and its partners to produce something the industry can use, not a one-time lab experiment that only works with duct tape and glue. “We’re not talking about lab hero experiments,” Blumenthal told LightReading. The real-world focus of TOEC has helped attract partners like  Agilent Technologies Inc. (NYSE: A), Google (NASDAQ: GOOG), Intel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC), Rockwell Collins Inc., and Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ) to help with the research. I wrote about Intel’s TBPS efforts back in July.

Terabit Ethernet is hard

TOEC could probably use the help because developing TbE is looking like no simple task according to LightReading. Bob Metcalfe, Ethernet’s creator, and now a Polaris Venture Partners partner, speculated two years ago that a terabit standard might need a rethinking of everything, even the fiber itself.

Based on current UCSB research, professor Blumenthal speculates that TbE  may include:

  • Photonic integrated circuits (PICs) are a must.
  • Coherent receivers, but at a scale well beyond what’s being used for 100Gbit/s Ethernet. A likely candidate is 1,024-QAM: quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) transmitting 10 bits per symbol, a scheme likely to require 100GHz electronics.
  • To make that coherent receiver energy-efficient, TOEC is “trying to move a lot of what’s in the digital signal processor into the optics,” Blumenthal says.
  • New materials for fiber-optics aren’t out of the question. “We won’t start out with that, but it’ll move in that direction,” Blumenthal says.
  • Other items on the TOEC shopping list include optical phase-locked loops, new semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs), and methods for drastically lowering on-chip optical losses.

The questions go beyond the optical layer. To make operations more synchronous padding and frame delineation were added to 10Gbit/s and 100Gbit/s Ethernet, Blumenthal pointed out. “Do we keep doing that? Or do we go purely asynchronous? We don’t know yet. …Once you put the word ‘Ethernet’ in there, it’s not about just transmission. It’s about being backward-compatible. That’s the beauty of Ethernet. We can’t lose that essence.

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The need for TbE is real (I first wrote about Intel’s TbE efforts here) and being driven by video. More video is already riding over existing networks. “We’re going to need much faster networking to handle the explosion in Internet traffic and support new large-scale applications like cloud computing,” Professor Blumenthal told Physorg. Stuart Elby, Vice President of Network Architecture for Verizon told Physorg, “Based on current traffic growth, it’s clear that 1 Terabit per second trunks will be needed in the near future.”

Facebook is already looking at TbE in their data centers. PCWorld reports that at the Ethernet Alliance‘s Technology Exploration Forum, Donn Lee, a Facebook Engineer said, “… there is already a need for 1 terabit.” Facebook has so many servers, and those servers can process data so fast, that they could fill 64 Terabit Ethernet pipes in the backbone of one data center, Lee said.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Terabit Ethernet

Terabit EthernetOver at The Register, there is an article heralding the coming of Terabit Ethernet. Apparently, researchers from Australia, China, and Denmark think they have opened the door to terabit per second Ethernet links using multiplexed 10Gbit/s data streams and small chalcogenide demux chips to demultiplex the 10 gig streams.

In the paper, entertainingly entitled Breakthrough switching speed with an all-optical chalcogenide glass chip: 640 Gbit/s demultiplexing, the researchers describe how injecting multiple 10gig data streams into optical cables is not a problem using existing optical technology (electro-optic modulator per stream) and optical time-division multiplexing (OTDM).

Recombining the data streams

The obstacle has been recombining those separate data streams at the end of the link and doing it fast enough. Apparently despite the recent hype about 40Gb Ethernet, the receiving and recombination of these streams is a problem at output rates higher than 40Gbits according to the research paper published in Optics Express, Vol. 17, Issue 4, on February 16th.

Until now the re-combination has been carried out using photo-detectors that can operate up to 40 Gbit/s or so. That limits us to just four 10gig streams. Achieving higher data rates this way means we have to send more parallel data streams down the cable and demultiplex – switch or recombine them – into one data stream faster still. This latest research uses waveguides just 5cm long by making them from chalcogenide glass chips with switching speeds measured in femtoseconds, a billionth of a millionth of a second, or a quadrillionth.

The researchers conclude that their test results confirm the enormous potential of chalcogenide-based waveguides for ultrafast optical signal processing.

They believe their technology can be extended to demultiplex 100 10Gbit/s data streams and so achieve a terabit Ethernet capability. The article points out that commercialization of such technology is, of course, if it takes place at all, many years away.

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Seems like its time to add another synonym for huge to our vocabulary petabyte, exabyte, zettabyte

Some thoughts from Bob Metcalfe on TB Ethernet

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Home Wireless Equipment Revenues to Double

Wireless Takes Over Home NetworksHome wireless networking equipment revenues are set to double according to In-Stat. Ethernet LANs have given way to wireless technologies. The market research firm forecasts that equipment revenues from home networking will climb from almost $9 billion in 2004 to over $21 billion in 2009. They further notes that the home wireless market is now dominated by multi-band 54Mbps 802.11g devices, as the number of installed home networks worldwide grew by 13 million from 2003 to 37 million in 2004. The company also finds that home networking equipment is continuing to drop in price while increasing functionality such as wireless and VoIP are being integrated. Silicon prices, higher volumes, and competition have all contributed toward aggressive pricing, says In-Stat.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

802.16 vs. 802.11

802.16 vs. 802.11The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 802.16 protocol is currently the dominant protocol suite for broadband wireless networking equipment used in public deployments. 802.16 is IP, not Ethernet, allowing longer distances than the more widely known 802.11 wireless LAN.

802.11 wireless LAN802.16 has a range of up to several kilometers. 802.16 allows for the strict reservation of bandwidth and QoS. 802.16 uses polling and not the contention access method found in 802.11. 802.16 allows for automatic adaption of radio operating parameters to meet changing traffic loads and interference levels.

The 802.16 protocol suite includes several millimeter microwave frequency secondary standards.

  • 10GHz to 66GHz – 802.16
  • 2GHz to 11GHz – 802.16a

A mobility standard is in the works – 802.16e

802.16 equipment is certified for interoperability by WiMax (Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access). So far only a handful of pre-standard products are available and WiMax has not certified any 802.16 products.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.