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Re: [STDS-802-3-400G] [802.3_400G] Presentation for next week



Jeff

 

Brad’s insights are exactly on the mark. Mark Nowell pointed out the same thing on the 25G CFI conference call on 6/27/14.

 

They also in no way conflict with the needs you identify. If we look at 10G, 40G, and 100G, the all followed the same pattern.

 

First generation required a mux (or gearbox) to match the higher optical rate to the lower existing electrical I/O (ASIC SerDes) rate. The second generation was optimized for cost and volume and matched the optical and electrical rates, and follow on generations require (or will require) reverse mux (or gearbox) to enable legacy optical interfaces to plug into new electrical I/O ports.


Chris

 

From: Jeffery Maki [mailto:jmaki@xxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Friday, July 11, 2014 8:08 AM
To: STDS-802-3-400G@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [STDS-802-3-400G] [802.3_400G] Presentation for next week

 

Brad,

 

I was thinking that you could at least react to the portion of my presentation that you do not think provides the critical perspective to meet the needs of data centers. Indeed, lets refine things into a consensus presentation for September.

 

Below in yellow, I mark your slide text that implies (says to me) that “cloud needs a new optical PMD for each SERDES rate.”

 

For electrical interfaces that are N wide and optical interfaces that are M wide, there is only one case for which N=M. When N does not equal M, a gearbox/mux is needed. To avoid them then requires new optical interfaces to be defined so each new value of N can be matched by a new value of M. SERDES and optical lane speeds have to go in lock step; new optical PMD standard for each case.

 

As you point out (and I did in my presentation in May) the modulation should also likely match. I would update my presentation to say that they do not have to be defined at the same time, that is the electrical and optical lanes of equal speed.

 

Considering a gearbox as an implementation fix implies only the one generation where the gearbox/mux is not needed is a proper implementation.  Here I disagree. Some applications need interoperation over system generation (i.e., form factor generation), especially among systems from competing system companies. Use of gearboxes preserve interoperation among systems of different SERDES generation and especially among systems from competing system companies with different SERDES rates. Here is where you should separate whether you are talking about interconnects that are primarily for the data center versus for router-to-router or router-to-transport.  For the data center, you could assert that the system generation (SERDES) rate is well managed for uniformity among the interconnected systems.

 

Jeff

 

 

 

 

From: Brad Booth [mailto:bbooth@xxxxxxxx]
Sent: Thursday, July 10, 2014 10:41 AM
To: STDS-802-3-400G@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [STDS-802-3-400G] [802.3_400G] Presentation for next week

 

Jeff,

 

Your suggestion for going through your presentation and selecting what you got right is not viable for next week's meeting. If you'd like to get a group together to do that filtering, then we could consider that for the September task force meeting.

 

You'll have to help me understand where I state that cloud needs a new optical PMD for each SERDES rate. It's not like 802.3 hasn't done that in the past, but I don't see where I state that in my presentation.

 

Thanks,
Brad

 

On Wed, Jul 9, 2014 at 6:39 PM, Jeffery Maki <jmaki@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Brad,

 

In Norfolk, I made such a presentation of the “things the task force might wish to consider when selecting interfaces.” Thus, I think it would help if you highlighted what you think I got correct in my presentation and what you would change in my presentation or add.

 

I see in your presentation is that cloud needs a new optical PMD standard for every new SERDES rate. Perhaps you should be discussing how distinct identity is driven by the SERDES rate.  Therefore, perhaps we should have multiple optical PMDs defined in the same project aligned to the different SERDES rates.

 

Jeff

 

 

From: Brad Booth [mailto:bbooth@xxxxxxxx]
Sent: Wednesday, July 09, 2014 12:52 PM
To:
STDS-802-3-400G@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [STDS-802-3-400G] [802.3_400G] Presentation for next week

 

Jeff,

 

You're correct that answering that question would be great. It's not a simple answer though, and everyone is likely to have varying views. What I was hoping to capture in the presentation is things the task force might wish to consider when selecting interfaces.

 

I'm hoping that the presentation will permit the task force to discuss some of these issues in a open forum to gain broad consensus on a path forward.

 

Thanks,
Brad

 

 

On Tue, Jul 8, 2014 at 8:01 PM, Jeffery Maki <jmaki@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Brad,

 

We have multiple optical reach objectives in 802.3bs. I do not see that the longevity (or obsolescence) would be the same for them all nor that the high-volume market adoption time frame would be the same for them all.

 

Could you make your presentation more granular with statements per each reach objective?

 

I don’t like gearboxes or I think you mean to say muxes either but if they do not appear in initial implementations then they will show up sooner as reverse muxes as electrical interfaces progress in lane count reduction. I would presume you would want there to be no mux needed when 400G Ethernet is adopted in large volume in the mega datacenter. The question then is what SERDES rate on switch ASICs do you see 400G Ethernet being adopted in large volume in the mega datacenter?

 

Jeff

 

 

From: Brad Booth [mailto:bbooth@xxxxxxxx]
Sent: Monday, July 07, 2014 1:13 PM
To:
STDS-802-3-400G@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [802.3_400G] Presentation for next week

 

All,

 

I'm attaching a first draft of a presentation I plan to make next week at the 802.3bs meeting. If you see any areas where I can provide greater clarification, please feel free to let me know.

 

If you'd like to be listed as a supporter of this material, I'd be honored to add your name.

 

Thanks,
Brad