Terabit Routers 59
Rocket Boy writes "I was perusing the news and came across this sucker. The specs on the thing look outrageous. Heck, the whole thing looks outrageous. 2.5-5.6TB/S speed, Supports 2240 OC-48 or 560 OC-192 connections. "
You can download a lot of po.. I mean play a lotta qua... I mean
read a lot of slas... I mean.. work. You could do a lot of
work with that.
Re:Here's an idea (Score:1)
In Beta now! (Score:1)
Avici - Has several betas ongoing. I know the product works, cause I work at Avici.
Nexabit - Close to releasing product, but it uses a crossbar arch., not as scaleable as ours.
Pluris - Claims similar to ours, though they haven't shown anything.
Juniper - Has a gigabit router now, working with Crisco to get a terbit unit.
You should check them all out. But we do have units working, and we have played a few mean games of Half Life on these beasts. But to be sure, these are the units that will be placed in phone and cable POPs to increase bandwidth on the Internet backbone. At a cool 1 million clams a piece, I wouldn't go yanking up CAT5 just yet.
So pointless... (Score:1)
(a) not everyone is using them [the 'net is only as fast as it's slowest link]
(b) it's all gotta squeeze through your modem at the end of the line.
We need a massively ambitious program (like the interstate highway program) to get high speed data access to every home in the nation. Damn the costs, the new 'net will generate new revenue to cover the costs down the road.
Terabits: Possible but Not Practical (Score:1)
re: interstate highways (Score:1)
It is interesting to note that the interstate highway system was also built as a backup runway system for the US military.
Evidence: interstate highways, especially the early ones, are mainly straight with few turns, have trees far back from the side of the road to accomodate wide airplane wings, are divided to provide a parallel road for military traffic, have controled access and are thus easy to close off.
Nexabit is HYPE (Score:1)
The Nexabit team, somehow, has managed to make a
name for themselves as hypemasters. They have
squeeged out press releases that make outrageous claims. They even went so far as to make a press
announcement using Frontier Networks name without first getting their permission. There are obvious legal problems with doing so, but even more so, they don't even have a working module in the lab at Frontier. I've talked to them all, and the only company I know of - to date - that has a working architecture, in fact, a kick ass architecture is
Avici. They based their architecture on supercomputers and they stuff up to 560 modules in a single monolithic architecture that scales. They did it right. First they built hardware that performs and scales, then they built software on top of it that rocks... if you saw their operating system CLI, you'd really like it. SO, in this crazy field, I can promise you that these guys are
REAL and it WORKS.
Better START Believing ! ! (Score:1)
Avici has done it. Unlike their competitors, the way you calculate total bandwith with Avici is simple. Mutliply the # of interfaces, by the bandwidth speed and you got it. It's that simple. Every port is wire speed whether you are running at OC3 or OC48. Unlike NExabit (the breakfast cereal), who calculates the bandwidth off of some derivative of backplane specification Avici over-engineered their box to be NON-BLOCKING through the use of virtual channels and dedicated buffering. And, by the way, Avici is NOT the only company that said that they to scale the system to terabits that you need to add more frames... in fact, SHOW ME ONE VENDOR WHO can scale to 5.6 terabits in a single frame - jeez.. no one can, it's physically impossible today based on today's electronics... and even if they could, it would have to be a water cooled unit to handle the heat. As for your comment on off-bus memory access - it shows that you have not had a single technical presentation on the product. If you are truly interested, i suggest you contact Avici and arrange it BEFORE you pontificate about an architecture you clearly know very little about.
And besides, the Avici story works.... I've seen it. Avici is a name you will be hearing about for a long time to come.
Maybe wait for a recession... (Score:1)
Maybe we should wait until the current boom is over and we start sinking into recession. Something like this could create a lot of jobs and involve a lot of government spending, which is what is needed to end a recession. Then we may just start another long boom.
Slashdotting (Score:1)
Re:Terabits: Possible but Not Practical (Score:1)
Re: interstate highways (Score:1)
I don't think the US system is much use as a landing zone. Landing is easy - it's finding gas, ammunition, and rental cars that's difficult.
Re:Moore's Law (Score:1)
You'd want a cluster of routers of that capacity at each physical POP that's connected by high-capacity fiber. Those will connect to metropolitan-area rings, and those to businesses and ISPs.
See the BBN^H^H^HGTE Internetworking fiber map [bbn.com].
History lesson? (Score:1)
-jwb
Re:Not news (Score:1)
http://www.lysator.liu.se/hackdict/split/kremva
HTH
Tob
Re:Terabits: Possible but Not Practical (Score:1)
Re: bottleneck (Score:1)
So, tech-specs are good, but you have to test them in a real world enviroment (ok, we're only a university
I'm still waiting for OC-3 (Score:1)
OC-3 Modules for the Cabletron SSR-8000 are available 8-(
Re:So pointless... (Score:1)
The interstate highway program was startred to revitilise the US economy under FDR. It was a form of government subsidised "busy-work," to get people back from the war into the workforce again. Same with the Hoover Dam.
This ("...massively ambitios program...") would truly be fantastic, as my girl-friend and I are both EAGERLY waiting the day cable-modem access comes to our neighboorhood. Something like this would do the trick, offer jobs now, and a fair surity of jobs in the years to come.
I'm all for it!
[OT] 9600 (Score:1)
---
Here's an even better idea. (Score:1)
Beuwolf Building for Dummies.
"Windows 98 Second Edition works and players better than ever." -Microsoft's Home page on Win98SE.
Re:Frequencies (Score:1)
The internal design of the SDH/STM networks is pretty interesting, but as always the problem is at the switches. The major problem with gigabit+ routers is always getting stuff from one port to another. The subsiduary problem is what to do if all the incoming traffic needs to go out one port.
Ah, the joys of router design. I do miss it sometimes
Calling Mae West (Score:1)
RB
Re:Moore's Law (Score:1)
break out the envelope:
assume 56k now, doubling every, what 1.5 years? that would 1tb in about 15 iterations, 15*1.5 = 22.5 years. I can wait for that.
Re:Calling Mae West (Score:1)
You west-siders max at our sunday levels...
http://www.mfsdatanet.com/MAE/ east.aggr.overlay.html [mfsdatanet.com]
http://www.mfsdatanet.com/MAE/ west.aggr.overlay.html [mfsdatanet.com]
MAE-EAST definitely deserves this monster first
Aaron Prosser
Re:Slashdotting (Score:1)
[*] Probably NetBSD and OpenBSD, too, but I've never had experience there.
PCs aren't fit for this (Score:1)
I disagree with this. Perhaps another type of system, but PCs are probably the worst and most inefficient architecture, mostly because they remain to be the only existing CISC architecture today, whereas everybody else is using a RISC processor.
I also would bet that all the PCs you need to equate to the product mentioned above would cost way more, and would take much more time to maintain.
On the issue of scaling in particular, I think this product was made with that bandwidth in mind, if not, what's the real use in marketing it as such?
Not really (Score:2)
Don't forget you've got 100's/1000's/etc... of people on the end of a line using that bandwidth, not just one squeezing at it.
Take the
If they terebyte xfer ability was there we'd upgrade dontcha think? Mbit ability has been available on the net for years & we're finally catching up to it. (2400, then 14400 (no one used 9600) then 28.8, 33.6, ISDN/ADSL or 56k OR WaveModem, and we're still not as fast as what the hubs & routers are talking to each other at AND we still think its slow.
We have the reverse situation at my company. We have 10/100's in everyone's PC but the routers & hubs are only 10's. What a pain! There's only 250 PC's systems to connect...they should get with it.
Anyway, up here in Canada Shaw has been VERY ambitious about wiring us up with the Wave & the ISP's are advertising *DSL lines. I don't know of an area in Calgary that doesn't have the wave. Maybe you need to move?
--Clay
Re:*DROOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL* (Score:2)
Step 1. Inflate two quantum-scale wormholes, by rotating a mass at relativistic velocities.
Step 2. Thread your high-speed optic fibre link through the wormholes. A few cm's should be enough.
Step 3. Plug the optic fibre into your high-speed router, at either end.
Re:So pointless... (Score:2)
The purpose for the system, of course, is to be able to move troops and war material across the country fast. The state of the nation's highways prior to the interstate system was awful (MA residents - remember how Rte. 9 was once the Mass. Pike? Like that)
This is a _lot_ like the Internet, which began as a military project but is pretty damn useful in the civilian world.
BTW - Although the Hoover Dam was built in the depression, I don't think that it actually was one of FDR's make-work projects. FDR was trying to revitalize the economy after the Great Depression, and died in '44 as World War II began to wrap up. Truman was president until '53, and he had to deal with switching over from a war economy to the post war economy. Busy work was not a part of that really; retooling for civilian goods was. He did have a lot of work anyhow - the unions kept giving him fits.
Frequencies (Score:2)
Moore's Law (Score:2)
A couple of these routers stationed across the world should handle an enormous amount of bandwidth.
If you take a look at the whitepaper, you'll see that they're partnered with Nortel-- one of the leading telecommunications companies.
What an amazing product.
Not the only one (Score:2)
http://www.nexabit.com/
http://www.argon.com/
http://www.ironbridgenetworks.com/
I'm sure there are others I'm missing.
nick
Re:I'll believe it when they build one (Score:2)
As for their hype about Packet-Over-Wavelength, any box that can do OC192 *does* this, as OC192 is the input to a DWDM Transponder.
Not news (Score:3)
Avici on other hand doesn't really say much about how their fabric is done, but I imagine it won't be crossconnect (2000x2000 wires...ugh). Probably some sort of hypercube or selective mesh. I wish Avici was as forthcoming with technical details as Pluris.
I'll believe it when they build one (Score:3)
There's also this little issue of balance. Nothing scales perfectly, and often you don't know where the bottleneck will be until you build one. Sure, if you add up all the links maybe you get up to X terabits, but maybe node-internal contention for some resource limits you to X/100. Of course, this never stopped marketing types from acting as though their machine/link/router would be the first in the history of computing to scale perfectly.