COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
EVOLUTION OF ETHERNET SPEEDS
WHATS NEW AND WHATS NEXT Greg Hankins <[email protected]> APRICOT 2014 Here is more rough stuff on the ALTO ALOHA network. Memo sent by Bob Metcalfe on May 22, 1973. APRICOT 2014 2014/02/25 2 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. AGENDA 1. Ethernet Speed Developments 2. 40 GE 3. 100 GE 4. 400 GE 3 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. KEY INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENTS FOR THE NEXT COUPLE OF YEAR Ethernet Standards P802.3bj 100 Gb/s Backplane and Copper Cable Task Force P802.3bm 40 Gb/s and 100 Gb/s Operation Over Fiber Optic Cables Task Force P802.3bq 40GBASE-T Task Force 802.3 400 Gb/s Ethernet Study Group 25 Gb/s (CEI-28G-VSR) 50 Gb/s (CEI-56G-VSR) Next-generation form factors CFP4, QSFP28, CDFP Higher Speed Ethernet IEEE OIF MSAs ASIC to Pluggable Module Electrical Signaling Pluggable Module MSAs SFF Committee 4 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ETHERNET STANDARDS DEVELOPMENT SUMMARY CONTINUING TECHNOLOGY EVOLUTION IEEE 802.3ba standard for 40 GE and 100 GE approved June 17, 2010 - 340 pages added to IEEE Std 802.3-2012 Shipping 1 st generation 40 GE and 100 GE media, test equipment, router interfaces, and optical transport gear in 2011/2012 - Mature, interoperable technology with broad vendor support 2 nd generation technology projects for both 40 GE and 100 GE are nearly finished - Available on the market this year 400 GE under development as the next Ethernet speed - Expected on the market in 2016+ 5 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 40 GE Applications 100 GE Applications 400 GE Applications (2016+) Data Center Aggregation and Core Data Center Access Server NICs Metro Core Service Provider Aggregation and Core Data Center Core Metro Core Service Provider Core Large Data Center Core Large Metro Core HIGHER SPEED ETHERNET TARGET APPLICATIONS 40 GE 40 GE 40 GE 40 GE 40 GE 100 GE 100 GE 400 GE 100 GE 400 GE 100 GE 400 GE 100 GE 400 GE 100 GE 400 GE 100 GE 400 GE 6 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. MPO CABLE ASSEMBLIES HIGH DENSITY RIBBON FIBER CABLING 40 GE and 100 GE short reach pluggable modules use a multifiber push on (MPO) cable assembly to interconnect network devices - Also called MTP by US Conec Widely available in a variety of high density multimode fiber (MMF) and single-mode fiber (SMF) cabling options for data centers - MPO to MPO - MPO cassette for patch panels with into LC, SC, etc - Keyed connectors maintain correct transmit/receive orientation 40GBASE-SR4 uses a 12-fiber OM3 or OM4 MMF MPO cable - 8 fibers used, left 4 for transmit and right 4 for receive - 4 middle fibers are unused 100GBASE-SR10 uses a 24-fiber OM3 or OM4 MMF MPO cable - 20 fibers used, top middle 10 for receive and bottom middle 10 for transmit - 2 fibers on each end are unused 12-Fiber MPO Cable Connector 100GBASE-SR10 CXP 10 x Transmit 10 x Receive 7 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. AGENDA 1. Ethernet Speed Developments 2. 40 GE 3. 100 GE 4. 400 GE 8 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 40 GE TRANSMISSION MULTIMODE AND SINGLE-MODE FIBER Multimode ribbon fiber - Used for distances of 100 m on OM3 and 150 m on OM4 MMF - Data is sent using multiple 850 nm lasers transmitting over multiple parallel fibers - MPO cables provide multiple separate transmit and receive strands of multimode fiber in a ribbon cable assembly Single-mode duplex fiber - Used for distances of 2 km, 10 km and 40 km on standard duplex SMF - WDM component in the pluggable module multiplexes four transmit lanes over one strand of fiber and four receive lanes over the other strand of fiber for 40GBASE-LR4 and 40GBASE-ER4 - 40 Gb/s serial transmit over one strand of fiber and receive over the other strand of fiber is used for 40GBASE-FR 4 x 10 Gb/s Over Parallel MMF 40GBASE-SR4 4 x 10 Gb/s Over Duplex SMF 40GBASE-LR4 and 40GBASE-ER4 9 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 40 GB/S QSFP+ MODULES OVERVIEW QUAD SMALL FORM-FACTOR PLUGGABLE+ Created for high density interfaces primarily short reach interfaces for data center applications - Small compact form factor enables low power consumption and high density - Also used for longer reach 40 GE Used for a variety of Ethernet, Fibre Channel and InfiniBand applications - 40 GE uses 4 x 10 Gb/s bidirectional channels Supports a variety of copper and fiber 40 GE interfaces - Breakout from 40 GE to 4 x 10 GE Same faceplate size as an XFP but slightly shorter (8.5 mm high x 18.35 mm wide x 52.4 mm long) Images courtesy of Finisar. 40GBASE-LR4 40GBASE-SR4 10 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Data Center Server and Access 40 GE to 4 x 10 GE Breakout Aggregation and Core Native 40 GE Physical Layer Reach 10 m Passive Copper Cable 100 m OM3/OM4 7 m Passive Copper Cable 100 m OM3/ 150 m OM4 10 km SMF Module 10GSFP+Cu 10GBASE-SR 40GBASE-CR4 40GBASE-SR4 40GBASE-LR4 Media Integrated Twinax (QSFP+ to 4 x SFP+) Parallel MMF (12-Fiber MPO to 4 x Duplex LC) Integrated Twinax (QSFP+ to QSFP+) Parallel MMF (12-Fiber MPO) Duplex SMF (LC) Standard July 2009 SFF-8431 June 2002 IEEE 802.3ae June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba 40 GBE QSFP+ PLUGGABLE MODULES 40GBASE-SR4 and 40GBASE-LR4 QSFP+ images courtesy of Finisar. 11 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. RECENT 40 GE DEVELOPMENTS IEEE P802.3bj 100 Gb/s Backplane and Copper Cable Task Force started in September 2011 - Optional Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) operation for 40 GE backplane links and copper cable interfaces - Task Force web page: http://www.ieee802.org/3/bj/ - Standard expected in June 2014 IEEE P802.3bm 40 Gb/s and 100 Gb/s Operation Over Fiber Optic Cables Task Force started in September 2012 - 40GBASE-ER4: 4 x 10 Gb/s over 40 km SMF - Optional EEE operation for 40 GE and 100 GE fiber interfaces - Task Force web page http://www.ieee802.org/3/bm/ - Standard expected in March 2015 IEEE P802.3bq 40GBASE-T Task Force started in May 2013 - 40GBASE-T: 4 x 10 Gb/s over 30 m 4-pair balanced twisted-pair copper cabling (ISO/IEC JTC1 SC25 WG3 and TIA TR- 42.7) - Task Force web page http://www.ieee802.org/3/bq/ - Standard expected in September 2015 12 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 40 GE TECHNOLOGY REFERENCE Physical Layer Reach 1 m Backplane 7 m Copper Cable 30 m *TP 100 m OM3 / 150 m OM4 2 km SMF 10 km SMF 40 km SMF Name 40GBASE-KR4 40GBASE-CR4 40GBASE-T 40GBASE-SR4 40GBASE-FR 40GBASE- LR4 40GBASE-ER4 Standard June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba September 2015 IEEE 802.3bq June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba March 2011 IEEE 802.3bg June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba March 2015 IEEE 802.3bm Electrical Signaling (Gb/s) 4 x 10 4 x 10 4 x 10 4 x 10 4 x 10 4 x 10 4 x 10 Media Signaling (Gb/s) 4 x 10 4 x 10 4 x 10 4 x 10 850 nm 1 x 40 1550 nm 4 x 10 1310 nm 4 x 10 1310 nm Media Type Backplane Twinax Cat 8.1 F/UTP? Cat 8.2 S/FTP? Parallel MMF Duplex SMF Duplex SMF Duplex SMF Module Type Backplane QSFP+ RJ45?, GG45?, TERA? CFP, QSFP+ CFP CFP, QSFP+ QSFP+ Market Availability No Known Development 2010 2016+ 2010 2012 CFP 2010 QSFP+ 2011 2015 13 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. AGENDA 1. Ethernet Speed Developments 2. 40 GE 3. 100 GE 4. 400 GE 14 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 100 GE TECHNOLOGY ADOPTION LIFECYCLE CROSSING THE CHASM INTO 2 ND GENERATION 100 GE C h a s m Innovators Early Adopters Early Majority Late Majority Laggards 2010/2011 1 - 2 Premium Ports/Slot 1 st Generation CFP Modules 2012/2013 2 - 4 Premium Ports/Slot 2 nd Generation CFP Modules 2014/2015 4 8 Lower-Cost Ports/Slot CFP2 Modules 2015+ 8 16 Commodity Ports/Slot CFP4 and QSFP28 Modules 2022+ 24 48 Commodity Ports/Slot Serial 100 Gb/s Modules 1 st Generation 100 GE 2 nd Generation 100 GE 3 rd Generation 100 GE 8 0 2 . 3 b j 8 0 2 . 3 b m Pluggable module images courtesy of Finisar. Adoption lifecycle curve based on Crossing the Chasm by Geoffrey Moore. 15 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 100 GE TRANSMISSION MULTIMODE AND SINGLE-MODE FIBER Multimode ribbon fiber - Used for distances of 100 m on OM3 and 150 m on OM4 MMF - Data is sent using multiple 850 nm lasers transmitting over multiple parallel fibers - MPO cables provide multiple separate transmit and receive strands of multimode fiber in a ribbon cable assembly Single-mode duplex fiber - Used for distances of 2 km, 10 km and 40 km on standard duplex SMF - WDM component in the pluggable module multiplexes all transmit lanes over one strand of fiber and all receive lanes over the other strand of fiber - 10x10 MSA standards use 10 x 10 Gb/s s in the 1550 nm range - IEEE standards use 4 x 25 Gb/s s in the 1310 nm range 10 x 10 Gb/s Over Parallel MMF 100GBASE-SR10 4 x 25 Gb/s Over Duplex SMF 100GBASE-LR4 and 100GBASE-ER4 10 x 10 Gb/s Over Duplex SMF 10x10-2km, 10x10-10km and 10x10-40km 16 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CXP C (100) X (10) Pluggable CFP C (100) Form-Factor Pluggable CFP2 C (100) Form-Factor Pluggable 2 Designed for high-density short reach applications - Small compact form factor limits distance to MMF interfaces Used for 100GBASE-SR10 and InfiniBand 12X QDR - Provides 12 bidirectional channels over 24 parallel fibers - 100 GE uses 10 of the 12 channels Slightly wider and shorter than an XFP (27 mm wide x 45 mm long) New module optimized for 100 GE long reach applications, but also used for short reach applications Used for IEEE Ethernet and 10x10 MSA standards Complex electrical gearbox and optical components need a large module - Long reach modules contain an integrated WDM component for duplex SMF transmission Large size and power consumption limits front panel density Larger than an iPhone 4 (82 mm wide x 145 mm long) 2 nd generation 100 GE module Optional external universal gearbox can convert electrical signaling so that all current IEEE and MSA 100 GE standards can be supported in the CFP2 module Smaller size and lower cost, complexity and power consumption than the CFP Approximately the width of a CFP (41.5 mm wide x 107.5 mm long) 100 GE PLUGGABLE MODULES OVERVIEW Images courtesy of Finisar. 17 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 100 m OM3 / 150 m OM4 10 km SMF 40 km SMF Module 100GBASE-SR10 CXP 100GBASE-SR10 CFP2 100GBASE-SR10 CFP 10x10-10km CFP 100GBASE-LR4 CFP 100GBASE-LR4 CFP2 10x10-40km CFP 100GBASE-ER4 CFP Media Parallel MMF (24-Fiber MPO) Parallel MMF (24-Fiber MPO) Parallel MMF (24-Fiber MPO) Duplex SMF (LC) Duplex SMF (LC) Duplex SMF (LC) Duplex SMF (LC) Duplex SMF (LC) Standard June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba August 2011 10x10 MSA June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba August 2011 10x10 MSA June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba Electrical Signaling (Gb/s) 10 x 10 10 x 10 10 x 10 10 x 10 10 x 10 10 x 10 10 x 10 10 x 10 Optical Signaling (Gb/s) 10 x 10 850 nm 10 x 10 850 nm 10 x 10 850 nm 10 x 10 1550 nm 4 x 25 1310 nm 4 x 25 1310 nm 10 x 10 1550 nm 4 x 25 1310 nm Market Availability 2012 2014 2012 2011 2010 2014 2014? 2012 100 GE PLUGGABLE MODULES Images courtesy of Finisar. 18 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 1 ST GENERATION 100 GE Fundamental 1 st generation technology constraints limit higher 100 GE density and lower cost Electrical signaling to the CFP - 100 Gb/s Attachment Unit Interface (CAUI) uses 10 x 10 Gb/s lanes (CAUI-10) Optical signaling on the media - 100GBASE-SR10: 10 x 10 Gb/s parallel - 10x10 MSA: 10 x 10 Gb/s s - 100GBASE-LR4 and 100GBASE-ER4: 4 x 25 Gb/s s CFP module size, complexity and power consumption 2nd generation modules based on 4 x 25 Gb/s electrical signaling are available now 10 25 10 100 GE Electrical Signaling Optical Signaling 119 cm 2 Image courtesy of Finisar. 19 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 1st Generation 100 GE 10 x 10 Gb/s Electrical and 4 x 25 Gb/s Optical 2nd Generation 100 GE 4 x 25 Gb/s Electrical and Optical 1 ST GENERATION VS 2 ND GENERATION 100 GE SIGNALING 10 Gb/s Electrical Signaling and 10:4 Gearbox Adds Complexity, Cost, Space, and Consumes Power Diagram source: http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/3/ba/public/jul08/cole_03_0708.pdf 20 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 1 st Generation 2 nd Generation Market Availability 2010 2010 2014 2014 2015 Approximate Module Dimensions (Length x Width to Scale) Front Panel Capacity (1 RU) 4 Ports 12 Ports 8 Ports 22/44 Ports 16/32 Ports Electrical Signaling (Gb/s) 10 x 10 CAUI-10 10 x 10 CPPI 10 x 10 CAUI-10 4 x 25 CAUI-4 4 x 25 CAUI-4 4 x 25 CAUI-4 Media MMF, SMF Twinax, MMF MMF, SMF MMF, SMF? MMF, SMF Power Consumption (W) < 24 W (100GBASE-LR4) < 14 W (2 nd Generation CFP) < 6 W (100GBASE-SR10) < 12 W (100GBASE-LR4) < 3.5 W (100GBASE-SR10) < 6 W (100GBASE-LR4) Industry Standard Modules CFP (82 mm Wide) CXP (27 mm Wide) CFP2 (41.5 mm Wide) QSFP28 (18.35 mm Wide) CFP4 (21.7 mm Wide) Cisco Proprietary Module CPAK (34.84 mm Wide) 100 GE PLUGGABLE MODULE EVOLUTION EACH MODULE INCREASES DENSITY, WHILE REDUCING COST AND POWER Industry standard images courtesy of Finisar. 21 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CFP2 supports electrical lanes that can run at multiple speeds - 10 x 10 Gb/s lanes (CAUI-10) for 100 GE - 8 x 25 Gb/s lanes (CAUI-4) for 100 GE - 8 x 50 Gb/s lanes (CDAUI-8) for 400 GE Optional external universal gearbox can convert electrical signaling so that all current IEEE and MSA 100 GE standards can be supported in the CFP2 module Smaller size and lower cost, complexity and power consumption than the CFP CFP2 MODULE OVERVIEW 100GBASE-SR4 100GBASE-SR10 100GBASE-LR4 100GBASE-ER4 10x10-2km 10x10-10km 10x10-40km CAUI-10 or CAUI-4 CAUI-10 or CAUI-4 10:4 or 4:10 External Gearbox CFP2 (Optional) ASIC Image courtesy of Finisar. 22 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CFP vs. iPhone 4s 100 GE MODULE EVOLUTION GRAPHICAL VIEW OF MODULE FORM FACTORS CFP CFP2 CFP4 CXP vs. iPhone 4s CFP2 vs. iPhone 4s Diagrams courtesy of the CFP MSA. 23 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CFP MODULE EVOLUTION FOR 100 GE AND 400 GE HIGHER DENSITY CAGES AND FRONT PANEL DENSITY CFP2 8 Ports Per Card Front Panel Density CFP4 16 Ports Per Card Front Panel Density Diagrams courtesy of the CFP MSA. 24 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 100 GE DEVELOPMENTS BACKPLANE AND COPPER CABLE IEEE P802.3bj 100 Gb/s Backplane and Copper Cable Task Force started in September 2011 - 100GBASE-KR4: 4 x 25 Gb/s NRZ 25 GBd on Megtron 6 backplane - 100GBASE-KP4: 4 x 25 Gb/s PAM-4 12.5 GBd on enhanced FR4 backplane - 100GBASE-CR4: 4 x 25 Gb/s over 5 m copper twinax cable Optional Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) operation for 40 GE and 100 GE backplane links and copper cable interfaces Task Force web page: http://www.ieee802.org/3/bj/ Working on Draft 3.1 for 1 st Sponsor recirculation ballot Standard expected in June 2014 25 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 100 GE DEVELOPMENTS FIBER OPTIC CABLES IEEE P802.3bm 40 Gb/s and 100 Gb/s Operation Over Fiber Optic Cables Task Force started in September 2012 - 40GBASE-ER4: 4 x 10 Gb/s over 40 km SMF - 4 x 25 Gb/s over 20 m MMF - Removed because there is not enough economic or technical advantage vs. existing MMF alternatives - 100GBASE-SR4: 4 x 25 Gb/s over 70 m OM3 and 100 m OM4 parallel MMF - 4 x 25 Gb/s over 500 m SMF - Removed due to lack of consensus that any of the proposals (CWDM, DMT, PAM-n, PSM4) provided sufficient size, cost and power reduction vs. existing SMF alternatives - CAUI-4 electrical signaling to the CFP2, CFP4 and QSFP28 Optional Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) operation for 40 GE and 100 GE fiber interfaces Task Force web page http://www.ieee802.org/3/bm/ Working on Draft 2.1 for 1 st Working Group recirculation ballet Standard expected in March 2015 26 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 100 GE TECHNOLOGY GENERATIONS PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER Available in 2010 More expensive, higher complexity and power consumption 400 Gb/s slot capacity Interfaces - 100GBASE-SR10 - 10x10-2km - 100GBASE-LR4 - 10x10-10km - 100GBASE-ER4 - 10x10-40km Available in 2014 Less expensive, lower complexity and power consumption 800 Gb/s slot capacity Supports existing interfaces plus 100GBASE-SR4 1 st Generation 100 GE 10 Gb/s and 25 Gb/s Signaling 2 nd Generation 100 GE 25 Gb/s Signaling CFP CFP CFP ASIC CFP CAUI-10 10 x 10 Gb/s Electrical CAUI-4 4 x 25 Gb/s Electrical CFP2 CFP2 CFP2 CFP2 CFP2 CFP2 CFP2 CFP2 ASIC 27 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 100 GE TECHNOLOGY REFERENCE Physical Layer Reach 1 m Backplane 5 m Copper Cable 7 m Copper Cable 70 m OM3 / 100 m OM4 100 m OM3 / 150 m OM4 2 km SMF 10 km SMF 40 km SMF Name 100GBASE-KP4 100GBASE-KR4 100GBASE-CR4 100GBASE-CR10 100GBASE-SR4 100GBASE-SR10 10x10-2km 10x10-10km 100GBASE-LR4 10x10-40km 100GBASE-ER4 Standard June 2014 IEEE 802.3bj June 2014 IEEE 802.3bj June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba March 2015 IEEE 802.3bm June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba March 2011 10x10 MSA August 2011 10x10 MSA June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba August 2011 10x10 MSA June 2010 IEEE 802.3ba Electrical Signaling (Gb/s) 4 x 25 4 x 25 10 x 10 4 x 25 10 x 10 10 x 10 10 x 10 10 x 10 10 x 10 10 x 10 Media Signaling (Gb/s) 4 x 25 NRZ and PAM-4 4 x 25 10 x 10 4 x 25 850 nm 10 x 10 850 nm 10 x 10 1310 nm 10 x 10 1310 nm 4 x 25 1550 nm 10 x 10 1310 nm 4 x 25 1550 nm Media Type Backplane Twinax Copper Twinax Copper Parallel MMF Parallel MMF Duplex SMF Duplex SMF Duplex SMF Duplex SMF Duplex SMF Module Type Backplane CFP2, CFP4, QSFP28 CXP, CFP2, CFP4, QSFP28 CFP2, CFP4, CPAK, QSFP28 CFP, CFP2, CFP4, CPAK, CXP CFP, CFP2? CFP, CFP2? CFP, CFP2, CFP4, CPAK, QSFP28? CFP, CFP2? CFP, CFP2, CPAK? Market Availability 2014+ 2014+ 2010 2015+ 2012 2011 2011 2010 2014? 2012 1 st Generation IEEE 1 st Generation 10x10 MSA 2 nd Generation IEEE 28 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. AGENDA 1. Ethernet Speed Developments 2. 40 GE 3. 100 GE 4. 400 GE 29 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. IEEE BANDWIDTH REQUIREMENT PROJECTIONS 100 1,000 10,000 100,000 1,000,000 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 Date R a t e
M b / s Core Networking Doubling 18 mos Server I/O Doubling 24 mos Gigabit Ethernet 10 Gigabit Ethernet 100 Gigabit Ethernet 40 Gigabit Ethernet Terabit Link Speeds are Needed Soon in Core Networks We are Here: 2014 Diagram source: http://www.ieee802.org/3/hssg/public/nov07/HSSG_Tutorial_1107.zip 30 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. INDUSTRY CHALLENGES FOR 400 GE AND BEYOND SOLUTIONS ARE GOOD, FAST, OR CHEAP PICK ANY TWO Economics Dictate the Solution IEEE Provides an Open Industry Forum to Make Decisions $ Market Requirements Technical Feasibility Electrical Signaling Optical Signaling Form Factor Cloud and Data Center Broadband and Mobile Transit and Transport Content Internet Exchange 31 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. WHY 400 GE? WHY NOT TERABIT SPEEDS? Given that Ethernet at terabit speeds is technically and economically impractical to develop until 2020+ we had to make a choice - Wait for >10 years between Ethernet speed increases (100 GE June 2010) - Start a feasible higher speed Ethernet standard now that can be ready by 2016 when the market needs something faster IEEE 802.3 Ethernet Bandwidth Assessment (BWA) Ad Hoc and the IEEE 802.3 Higher Speed Ethernet (HSE) Consensus Ad Hoc spent a lot of time analyzing market demand and technical options High degree of consensus in the IEEE that 400 GE should be the next Ethernet speed - CFI straw poll: yes 132, no 0, abstain 1 - Motion for Study Group: yes 87, no 0, abstain 4 IEEE 802.3 Higher Speed Study Group first had to analyze market demand and technical options - Eventually decided on 40 GE and 100 GE 32 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THEORETICAL M (1000) FORM-FACTOR PLUGGABLE USING TODAYS TECHNOLOGY IS IMPRACTICAL Using current technology with 25 Gb/s electrical signaling, a TbE module (MFP) would use 40 channels The size of the module can be estimated at sq. in. per W of power consumed If a CFP2 module consumes 7 W, then the MFP could consume 70 W This would require 45 sq. in. to cool and could make the module 5 in. by 9 in., which is too big to power and cool Theoretical MFP 40 x 25 Gb/s Electrical Channels 5 in. x 9 in. (45 sq. in.) 70 W Power CFP2 4 x 25 Gb/s Electrical Channels 1.63 in. x 4.23 in. (6.9 sq. in.) 7 W Power for 100GBASE-LR4 33 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. IEEE 802.3 400 GB/S ETHERNET STUDY GROUP 400 GE Call for Interest (CFI) was presented at the March 2013 IEEE Plenary and approved to be an official IEEE Study Group Project Authorization Request (PAR) and Criteria for Standards Development (CSD) for P802.3bs adopted at the January 2014 IEEE Interim - Project approval request planned for March 27, 2014 - 1st Task Force meeting expected in May, 2014 Reach objectives adopted by Study Group at the November 2013 IEEE Plenary - 100 m MMF - 500 m SMF - 2 km SMF - 10 km SMF - Strong desire to support 400 GE to 4 x 100 GE breakout functionality based on 40 GE to 4 x 10 GE success 400 GE standard expected in 2016+ First interfaces expected to be available in 2016+ Study Group web page http://www.ieee802.org/3/400GSG/ 34 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 1 st Generation 2 nd Generation 3 rd Generation Year 2016+ 2016+ 2019+ 2022+ Electrical Signaling CDAUI-16 16 x 25 Gb/s CDAUI-16 16 x 25 Gb/s CDAUI-8 8 x 50 Gb/s CDAUI-4 4 x 100 Gb/s Module CDFP 4 x CFP4 CFP2 CFP4 400 GE PLUGGABLE MODULE EVOLUTION ESTIMATES EACH MODULE INCREASES DENSITY, WHILE REDUCING COST AND POWER Ethernet at Terabit Speeds Becomes Feasible CDFP images courtesy of the CDFP MSA. CFP images courtesy of Finisar and TE Connectivity. 35 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 400 GB/S CDFP MODULE OVERVIEW DESIGNED TO SUPPORT 4 TB/S PER SLOT Style B (10 W) Style A (5 W) CD = 400 in Roman numerals, C = 100 and D = 500 Optimized for short reaches and targeted for distances up to 500 m Supports copper cables, active optical cables and transceivers Initial focus is active optical cables Images courtesy of TE Connectivity and the CDFP MSA. 36 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ETHERNET SPEED EVOLUTION SUMMARY 10 GE is being widely deployed in every part of the network - 10 GE servers are driving the need for 40 GE and 100 GE in data centers 40 GE is increasingly deployed in data center networks - Popular in data centers for 40 GE and 4 x 10 GE breakout 100 GE is in transition to 2 nd generation technology - Still a couple of generations away from 100 Gb/s serial signaling 400 GE development has started and will leverage 100 GE Electrical signaling is increasingly challenging at higher speeds - Maturing 25 Gb/s technology, working on 50 Gb/s technology Ethernet at Terabit speeds is still unfeasible in the near future, but well get there eventually (2022+) 37 COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. MORE INFORMATION IEEE P802.3bj 100 Gb/s Backplane and Copper Cable Task Force - http://www.ieee802.org/3/bj/ IEEE P802.3bm 40 Gb/s and 100 Gb/s Operation Over Fiber Optic Cables Task Force - http://www.ieee802.org/3/bm/ IEEE P802.3bq 40GBASE-T Task Force - http://www.ieee802.org/3/bq/ IEEE 802.3 Higher Speed Study Group - http://www.ieee802.org/3/hssg/index.html IEEE 802.3 Industry Connections Ethernet Bandwidth Assessment Ad Hoc - http://www.ieee802.org/3/ad_hoc/bwa/index.html IEEE 802.3 Industry Connections Higher Speed Ethernet Consensus Ad Hoc - http://www.ieee802.org/3/ad_hoc/hse/public/index.html IEEE 400 GE Call-For-Interest presentation - http://www.ieee802.org/3/cfi/0313_1/CFI_01_0313.pdf IEEE 802.3 400 Gb/s Ethernet Study Group - http://www.ieee802.org/3/400GSG/ CFP MSA - http://www.cfp-msa.org/ SFF Committee - http://www.sffcommittee.com/ CDFP MSA - http://www.cdfp-msa.com/ COPYRIGHT 2014 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. QUESTIONS?