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My fellow
colleagues ,
Last week I sent out a list of items that I felt need
to be addressed to ensure that a 40G PAR would be justified. At a
subsequent EA teleconference intended to build concensus in the HSSG, I offered
to review the presentations made in support of 40G Economic Feasibility and
comparing 40G vs 4x10 LAG performance to ensure that I was not being too harsh
in my consideration of the material that was
presented.
Over the weekend, I reviewed every presentation I could
find on these subjects so that I could be comfortable that I was not being
unfair in my concerns. Fortunately, it was not a huge task as there are not that
many to review.
After doing so, I found myself less convinced in
the validity of some presentations that were made. This statement is not
made to criticize my colleagues, but to honor the concept of peer review which
requires that we review and criticize, otherwise we might as well just
upload them to a server and forget about them.
Specifically, I disagreed with cost arguments made on
the assumption that 10G cost remains a constant, when in fact I anticipate
substantial reductions in 10G cost over the next few years at a rate much faster
than today due to a few factors;
1) Higher density/lower cost optical form factors
(SFP+) allowing better utilization of switch infrastructural cost and QSFP for
NICs.
2) Smaller geometry CMOS allowing higher port densities
to work in synergy with PMD cost reductions.
3) Integration of XFI / SFI interfaces directly into
ASICs or multi-port PHYs driving 10G cost further
downward.
4) Higher volumes / commoditization of 10G driving cost
down much faster than the current trajectory.
While 40G can leverage some of these elements, it
cannot leverage the volume that feeds the downward cost spiral. So in 4 years, a
40G switch port cost is going to be based on low-volume, freshly designed and
un-amortized silicon used primarily for server interconnect, whereas a 10G port
cost will be based on amortized, high-volume silicon being used in a huge array
of applications. Having different trajectories, the relative cost for 40G will
be higher than presented. This is true for 100G as well, but who is arguing
a need for 100G based on cost? It is bandwidth that drives 100G
demand.
In addition, I found presentations
claiming that LAG was insufficient to address server I/O bandwidth needs, yet
those presentations failed to address upcoming technology enhancements like
TRILL and its impact combined
with I/O Virtualization, perhaps with a physical manifestation of QSFP and
MPO optics which I believe can lead to graceful performance scaling for
servers that does not demand an intermediate IEEE standard. In other words,
activities and technologies are advancing which will parse server network access
into multiple conversations that can then be put onto a LAG group with much
higher than presented performance
levels.
Now, I realize that I am
swimming upstream here by asking that the proponents for "40G now" to
complete a task that took the 100G proponents almost a year to accomplish, in
less than 6 months, but then I am not asking them to do that. My first
choice, the one I proposed in Geneva, was that we move 100G forward (because
it is DONE) and that we continue to work on 40G (until it is done).
This appears to be a
minority position because apparently some people will accept an unproven
40G proposal rather than risk 100G. Others think that 40G is proven sufficiently
and are demanding "40G now" or they will not allow a 100G PAR to go
forward. Those in the latter camp must either be unconvinced of my
concerns, or they think my concerns are insufficient to justify any further work
being done to justify a 40G project.
I can accept differences
of opinion.
What I cannot do,
however, is pretend that these issues do not exist, or that the work we would
have to spend getting a 40G standard done is not going to delay the much needed
100G aggregation solution our customers demand. I cannot ignore what I
perceive as holes in the 40G
presentations.
So, to provide a little
more direction to my colleagues in the "40G now or the HSSG stalls" crowd,
I am asking you to include relative cost trajectories in your analysis of 40G vs
10G cost models, and to include technology enhancements to LAG (TRILL, I/O
Virtualization, QSFP, MPO) in your performance
analysis.
If you feel that this is
unnecessary, I am requesting that you communicate this position to me as soon as
possible so that I can prepare a presentation on these areas of
concern for the July meeting.
Respectfully,
Dan Dove Dove Networking
Solutions - Serving ProCurve Networking by HP
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