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Implementing 100 Gigabit Ethernet: A Practical Guide

Implementing 100 Gigabit Ethernet: A Practical Guide. Joel Goergen VP of Technology / Chief Scientist. Special Note Regarding Forward Looking Statements.

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Implementing 100 Gigabit Ethernet: A Practical Guide

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  1. Implementing 100 Gigabit Ethernet: A Practical Guide Joel Goergen VP of Technology / Chief Scientist

  2. Special Note Regarding Forward Looking Statements This presentation contains forward-looking statements that involve substantial risks and uncertainties, including but not limited to, statements relating to goals, plans, objectives and future events.  All statements, other than statements of historical facts, included in this presentation regarding our strategy, future operations, future financial position, future revenues, projected costs, prospects and plans and objectives of management are forward-looking statements.  The words “anticipates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “expects,” “intends,” “may,” “plans,” “projects,” “will,” “would” and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements, although not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying words.  Examples of such statements include statements relating to products and product features on our roadmap, the timing and commercial availability of such products and features, the performance of such products and product features, statements concerning expectations for our products and product features, and projections of revenue or other financial terms. These statements are based on the current estimates and assumptions of management of Force10 as of the date hereof and are subject to risks, uncertainties, changes in circumstances, assumptions and other factors that may cause the actual results to be materially different from those reflected in our forward looking statements.  We may not actually achieve the plans, intentions or expectations disclosed in our forward-looking statements and you should not place undue reliance on our forward-looking statements.  In addition, our forward-looking statements do not reflect the potential impact of any future acquisitions, mergers, dispositions, joint ventures or investments we may make.  We do not assume any obligation to update any forward-looking statements. Any information contained in our product roadmap is intended to outline our general product direction and it should not be relied on in making purchasing decisions. The information on the roadmap is (i) for information purposes only, (ii) may not be incorporated into any contract and (iii) does not constitute a commitment, promise or legal obligation to deliver any material, code, or functionality.  The development, release and timing of any features or functionality described for our products remains at our sole discretion.

  3. Per IEEE-SA Standards Board Operations Manual, January 2005 At lectures, symposia, seminars, or educational courses, an individual presenting information on IEEE standards shall make it clear that his or her views should be considered the personal views of that individual rather than the formal position, explanation, or interpretation of the IEEE.

  4. Acronym Cheat Sheet • CFI – Call for Interest • DWDM – Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing • EMI – Electro-magnetic Interference • Gbps – Gigabit per Second • HSSG – Higher Speed Study Group • ITU – International Telecommunications Union • IETF – Internet Engineering Task Force • JEDEC - Joint Electron Device Engineering Council • MAC – Media Access Control • MDI – Medium Dependent Interface • MSA – Multi Source Agreement • OIF – Optical Internetworking Forum • PCS – Physical Coding Sublayer • PMA – Physical Medium Attachment • PMD – Physical Medium Dependent • PHY – Physical Layer Device • SERDES – Serialize / De-serialize • SMF / MMF – Single Mode Fiber / Multi Mode Fiber • Tbps – Terabit per Second • WIS – WAN Interface Sublayer • XGMII – 10 Gigabit Media Indpendent Interface

  5. IEEE802.3 HSSG • My thoughts on where we are …..

  6. Current IEEE802.3 HSSG Objectives as of January 2007 • To date, the objectives within the study group are: • Support full duplex only • Preserve the 802.3 / Ethernet frame format at the MAC Client Service Interface • Preserve the min and max FrameSize of current 802.3 standard • Support a speed of 100Gbps at the MAC/PLS Interface • Support at least 10km on SMF • Support at least 100m on OM3 MMF • Support a BER better then or equal to 10^-12 at the MAC / PLS Service Interface • Support at least 40km on SMF

  7. Upcoming IEEE802.3 HSSG March Plenary • Looking for data to support the Broad Market Potential of 100Gbps. • Looking for data to support the market for 40km on SMF.

  8. Shipping an IEEE802.3 HSSG Vendor Compliant Product • Key architectural points need to be addressed from the MAC to the PMD. • Likely to be mid 2009 or later before the standard is complete enough to ensure compatibility between vendors. MAC = Media Access Control MDI = Medium Dependent Interface PCS = Physical Coding Sublayer PMA = Physical Medium Attachment PMD = Physical Medium Dependent WIS = WAN Interface Sublayer XGMII = 10 Gigabit Media Independent Interface

  9. Developing a Standard Ideas From Industry Industry Pioneering 1 Year Feasibility and Research Ad Hoc Efforts Call for Interest CFI July 18, 2006 Study Group HSSG is here Task Force Q4 ‘07 Working Group Ballot Sponsor Ballot Force10 delivers 100G Ethernet System Standards Board Approval ’09 – ‘10 Publication

  10. 100Gbps Architecture • Line Card • Switch Fabric • Back Plane • Power System

  11. Ingress L ink List SRAM 400 MHZ QDRII+ Ingress Buffer SDRAM 1 Ghz DDR Lookup DataBase SRAM 400 MHZ DDRII+ Lookup DataBase SRAM 400 MHZ DDRII+ CAM 200 MSPS 140 50 72 32 123 256 50 72 25 36 Ingress Packet Edit Ingress Packet Parsing Egress Lookup Ingress Lookup Ingress Packet Edit 10 x CEI-11G-SR Inter laken/SPI-S 10 x CEI-11G-SR Inter laken/SPI-S 16 x CEI-11G-LR 10 x CEI-11G-SR Inter laken/SPI-S 100g MAC and Phy Fibre Inter laken/SPI-S Inter laken/SPI-S NPU TM 32 50 72 123 256 100 100 140 Egress L ink List SRAM 400 MHZ QDRII+ Ingress Buffer SDRAM 1 Ghz DDR CAM 200 MSPS Clock, reset, PCI Express, Test Pins Clock, reset, PCI Express, Test Pins Thoughts for a 100Gbps Line Card

  12. Thoughts for a 100Gbps Line Card • 600 Mhz x 192 bit datapath is barely feasible in 90 nm. Need to study 65nm feasibility and pick the right width and clock speed. • Memory components listed in the line card diagram are available now or definitely before 2008. • 32 x 10Gbps CEI serdes are possible in few 90 nm ASIC technologies. • Feasibility of Mac is well documented by belhadj_01_1106.pdf. • NPU Signal Pin Count 643 in this example including SERDES pins • Traffic Manager Signal Pin Count 1269 in this example including SERDES pins. May have to be implemented using two chips to reduce the pin count. • Die Size of the above chips are application dependent. For a hardwired NPU,TM 65 nm may be the right process.

  13. Thoughts for a 100Gbps Front End • Optics – Short Reach (100m) • 10 by 10Gbps • Optics – Long Reach (10km) • 4 by 25Gbps • 5 by 20Gbps • Optics – Extended Reach (40km) • 4 by 25Gbps • 5 by 20Gbps

  14. Thoughts for a 100Gbps Front End

  15. SDD21 (dB) = (-0.1- 0.78 *f ^(1/2) – 0.74* f) Thoughts for a 100Gbps Front End • XFI based on 8 inches + 1 connector for fr-4 circuit boards • Applications suggest 12 inches + 1 connector for fr-4 circuit boards • See proposed model

  16. Thoughts for a 100Gbps Switch Fabric

  17. Thoughts for a 100GbpsSwitch Fabric • 600 Mhz x 192 bit data path is barely feasible in 90 nm. Need to study 65nm feasibility and pick the right width and clock speed for a digital cross bar, multiple ASIC implementation. • 32 x 10Gbps CEI serdes are possible in few 90 nm ASIC technologies. Need to study scaling 500 x 10Gbps SERDES across multiple ASICs. • Die Size of the above chips are application dependent. For a hardwired switch fabric, 65 nm may be the right process. • Conceivable to see Master / Slave ASIC Architecture.

  18. Thoughts for a 100GbpsBack Plane Data Packet Line Cards --GbE / 10 GbE RPMs SFMs Power Supplies SERDES Backplane Traces Mid Plane applications have complexities with holes and connectors that make it incompatible for HSSG systems.

  19. Thoughts for a 100GbpsBack Plane – Long Reach 30in. SDD21 = -20*log10(e)*(b1*sqrt(f) + b2*f + b3*f^2 - b4*f^3) b1 = 1.25e-5 b2 = 1.20e-10 b3 = 2.50e-20 b4 = 0.95e-30 f = 50Mhz to 15000Mhz • Commercially available resin-based laminates exist to meet these requirements (see OIF2006.097.00) • Proposed CEI25 Channel Model (see OIF2006.047.00) – Chip vendors would like to see 9dB better channel loss.

  20. Optical or Copper Media Forwarding Engine Reserved for Power Network Processor Backplane Media S S E E R R D D E E S S Power System:Thoughts for a 100Gbps Line Card • Architecture: • Clean trace routing. • Good power noise control means better than... • Analog target 60mVpp ripple • Digital target 150mVpp ripple • Excellent SERDES to connector signal flow to minimize ground noise. • Best choice for 100Gbps systems.

  21. Reserved for Power S E R D E S S E R D E S Digital Cross Bar Power System:Thoughts for a 100Gbps Fabric • Architecture: • Clean trace routing. • Good power noise control means better than... • Analog target 30mVpp ripple • Digital target 100mVpp ripple • Excellent SERDES to connector signal flow to minimize ground noise.

  22. V+ V+ on/off on/off V- V- Power System:300VDC to 500VDC System Backplane PEM-A DC PSU-A RTNA F1 + Vo1 Inrush and soft start circuit CB1 VDC Vin ~ F3* F2 RTN -VA - V+ Vo2 on/off RTNB F1 + F4* RTN V- CB2 VDC Vin ~ Vo3 F3 -VB - F5* RTN DC PSU-B PEM-B System Board

  23. Power System:300VDC to 500VDC System • Current DC systems require large gauge wire. Reducing the current capacity will allow smaller gauge wires. • Smaller gauge wires allow ease of use, yet still can carry the 10kw to 15kw required for a 100Gbps system. • Future AC systems may have to go to 480VAC to allow for smaller gauge wires.

  24. Industry System Port Count Cycle 2006 2008 2010* 2004 2002 GE 100’s Ports > 1000 Ports 10’s Ports > 100’s Ports 100’s Ports 10 GE Standard In Development 100 GE 10’s Ports

  25. Conclusions • Establish optical interfaces • Establish electrical interfaces, including circuit board trace characteristics for both the front end optics / electrical, and the back plane electrical • Study the ASIC requirements for the Network Processor Unit, the Traffic Manager, and the Switch Fabric blocks. • Study the power subsystem. • Cooling and EMI have to be a part of this.

  26. Thank You

  27. IEEE 802.3 HSSG Reflector and Web • To subscribe to the HSSG reflector, send an email to: ListServ@ieee.org with the following in the body of the message: subscribe stds-802-3-hssg <your first name> <your last name> end • SSG web page URL: http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/3/hssg/index.html • John D’Ambrosia, Chair IEEE802.3 HSSG • jdambrosia@force10networks.com

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