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21st November 2006
Ground-Breaking
100 Gigabit Ethernet Demonstration Across 4,000-km Live Network
A first-ever demonstration of 100 Gigabit Ethernet (100GbE)
technology by a team of industry leaders, including Finisar,
Infinera, Internet2, Level 3 Communications, and University
of California at Santa Cruz, shows that 100GbE technology
is viable and capable of implementation in existing optical
networks with 10 Gbit/s wavelengths.
This breakthrough trial also highlights how next-generation
technology can address the emerging bandwidth needs of network
providers and their users as advanced Internet-based applications
continue to proliferate.
The system successfully transmitted a 100GbE signal from
Tampa, Florida to Houston, Texas, and back again, over ten
10 Gb/s channels through the Level 3 network. This is the
first time a 100GbE signal has been successfully transmitted
through a live production network.
The 100GbE system* was on display in November at the Infinera
booth at the SC06 International Conference in Tampa. The system
transmitted a 100GbE signal to the Internet2 booth during
the show.
Finisar provided the optical transceivers for this demonstration,
Infinera provided the DWDM system and project management,
Internet2 was involved in developing the methodology and supporting
the demonstration, Level 3 Communications provided the ten
10 Gb/s channels from Tampa to Houston, and UCSC designed
and implemented the network interface including the packet
resequencing scheme.
Future Implementation Path
"This successful demonstration shows that this concept
of 100GbE over 10x10 Gb/s DWDM works and provides a near future
implementation path," said Dr. Daryl Inniss, vice president
of Ovum-RHK's Communication Components research.
"100 Gigabit Ethernet will be a critical technology
to accommodate bandwidth growth, and this demonstration shows
that we have the capability to implement this as a super-lambda
service over today's networks," said Infinera co-founder
and CTO Drew Perkins.
"The Infinera DTN, which is the only DWDM system that
supports 100 Gb/s on a line card, is capable today of handling
100GbE services simply and cost-effectively."
"The research and education community continues to be
the key driver for the development of extreme bandwidth services
like 100GbE," said Steve Cotter, Internet2's director
of network services. "We are very interested in investigating
this breakthrough technology, in collaboration with our network
partners, to ensure that our network not only keeps pace but
also anticipates the future demands of our members as they
pursue increasingly bandwidth-intensive applications, from
telemedicine to high-energy physics to high-performance grid
computing, among many others."
"This new approach to providing 100 Gig Ethernet service
over long distances enables LAN Ethernet protocols in the
WAN environment," said Jack Waters, CTO of Level 3. "Compared
to other methods that have been demonstrated, this is a practical,
economical solution that operates over the wide area using
existing DWDM technologies. We're pleased to have been involved
with developing and testing this solution, and will be watching
closely as it is commercialized.
"Super-Lambda Services The largest IP backbones are
currently using multiple 10 Gb/s links between core sites,
and will soon demand 100 Gb/s connections to increase their
capacity to keep up with fast-growing bandwidth demand. Many
service providers prefer to support 100 Gigabit Ethernet links
using their current transport network infrastructures. This
demonstration shows that today's 10 Gb/s transport networks
can support 100GbE services.
The system relies on a single-chip 100GbE network interface
that implements a lane alignment and packet resequencing scheme
to bond 10 parallel 10 Gb/s channels into one logical flow
while maintaining packet ordering at the receiver. This eliminates
the performance issues that can arise with the use of the
existing link aggregation techniques for combining multiple
data channels.
Services that combine multiple wavelengths to offer a single
service are referred to as super-lambda services.
High-Speed Application
The research and education community is a leader in creating
very large flows on the Internet, with some research institutions
planning on flows in multiple hundreds of Gigabits/second
or even Terabits/second.
In a related demonstration at the Internet2 booth on the
SC06 showfloor, Internet2 and Infinera showcased an advanced
two-way videoconferencing application.
Reliable, two-way video technology is quickly becoming a critical
and necessary component of many important research and education
initiatives including those in telemedicine, seismology and
astronomy. 100GbE technology would enable more than 3000 Digital
Video Transport System or more than 60 uncompressed HDTV video
applications to operate simultaneously on a single interface.
Industry Standard Priority
The IEEE Higher Speed Study Group (HSSG) recently began working
on specifications for higher speed Ethernet. The partners
in this demonstration are actively supporting these efforts.
The pre-standard specification used in this demonstration
was jointly developed by Infinera and a UCSC team including
Professor of Computer Engineering Anujan Varma and his Ph.D.
student Arvinderpal S. Wander.
The annual SC06 International Conference on High-Performance
Computing, Networking, Storage, and Analysis will be held
at the Tampa Convention Center in Tampa, Florida. For more
show information, visit http://sc06.supercomputing.org/.
*Technical Demonstration: The demonstration encodes a 100GbE
signal into ten 10 Gb/s streams using an Infinera-proposed
specification for 100GbE across multiple links. A single Xilinx
FPGA implements this packet numbering scheme and electrically
transmits all ten signals to ten of Finisar's 10 Gb/s XFP
optical transceivers which in turn convert the signals to
optics. These signals are then transmitted to an Infinera
DTN DWDM system.
For the long-distance demonstration the 100GbE signal was
then handed off to Infinera systems within the Level 3 network
where it was transmitted across the Level 3 network to Houston
and back.
This pre-standard specification for 100GbE guarantees the
ordering of the packets and quality of the signal across 10
Gb/s wavelengths and demonstrates that it is possible for
carriers to offer 100GbE services across today's 10 Gb/s infrastructure.
Web: www.Internet2.com
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