|
Sun
Microsystems is preparing to offer new 10 Gigabit Ethernet technology
across its hardware product line, including its processors, blades,
motherboards and switches.
The Santa Clara, Calif., IT company
formally announced its 10G networking technology, previously dubbed
"Neptune," on Feb. 13. The first product to use this technology is a
network adaptor card that uses the newer PCI Express standarda serial
link that enables more to move through fewer lineswill start to ship
to customers immediately.
Sun
Microsystems is preparing to offer new 10 Gigabit Ethernet technology
across its hardware product line, including its processors, blades,
motherboards and switches.
The Santa Clara, Calif., IT company
formally announced its 10G networking technology, previously dubbed
"Neptune," on Feb. 13. The first product to use this technology is a
network adaptor card that uses the newer PCI Express standarda serial
link that enables more to move through fewer lineswill start to ship
to customers immediately.
Sun officials first hinted at the new Ethernet technology
in January, when they announced that the company's latest SPARC
multi-threaded processor, called "Rock," will be released in 2008.
This
new Ethernet technology, according to Sun officials, has been
specifically designed to take advantage of the multi-threading
capabilities found in its own Solaris operating system and its line of
UltraSPARC T1 processors, formally known as Niagara.
Unlike
conventional processors that can only process a single thread of
instruction at once, multi-threading allows the chip to be more
flexible. If a process is waiting for memory for one thread, the chip
can work on another.
This
CMT (chip multi-threaded architecture) allows the CPU to run multiple
threads in parallel, providing high throughout for multithreaded
applications, such as Sun's Solaris OS.
This 10G Ethernet works
by using multiple DMA (direct access memory)in this case up to
40channels to reduce the need for CPU resources during I/O processing.
The technology also allows hardware-based early flow
classification of workloads, higher performance with parallel threads,
I/O partitioning and virtualization, and low CPU utilization and CPU
load balancing.
By using this technology with a SPARC-based
server, the company is able to deliver four times the performance of
its current network interface.
Besides multi-threaded processors,
the 10G Ethernet, according to Sun, will improve performance in
multicore processors that company uses, such as the dual-core Opteron
chip from Advanced Micro Devices.
The new networking interface
with also work with servers that will eventually be based on Intel
processors as well. After spending years apart, the two companies
recently announced a new partnership that allows Sun to expand its line of x86 servers.
Charles
King, an analyst at Pund-IT Research in Hayward, Calif., said that
while most companies can usually get the performance they need from
either a 1G bit or 2G bit Ethernet, Sun appears have bet that 10G bit
is ready for mainstream commercial adoption.
"When you see this
type of end-to-end deployment of an advanced technology, the company is
gambling it's ready for widespread commercial adoption,"
King said.
"You are also seeing Sun expanding very aggressively into the
commercial market and this could offer potential opportunities in the
future."King added that it would still be some time before Sun's
investment in this type of networking technology, as well as its
adoption of multi-threaded applications, pays off. First, he said, Sun
has to convince customers to break with their old habits to adopt this
newer technology.
David Caplan, the senior product manager for
networking technologies at Sun, said 10G bit technologies will find a
market with companies that are looking to reduce the data center costs in ways other than server consolidation.
"IT
administrators are looking to use fewer and fewer servers to save on
power and to save on rack space," Caplan said. "With 10 [gigabit]
networking, you can save on cabling and that adds up, too."
The
first piece of technology to incorporate the 10G bit technology will be
in the form of an x8 Express Dual 10 G bit XFP low-profile adapter card
based on the PCI Express standard.
The eight "lanes" will allow
data to move at 16 gigabits per second on each 10G Ethernet port.
Although the new Sun Ethernet technology is only available now in this
networking card, company officials said it will begin to appear in
modules for servers, as well as the multi-threaded Niagara 2
processors, by the end of the year.
The 10G Ethernet technology will begin to appear on the motherboards of Sun's servers by 2008.
The 10G Ethernet networking card has a starting price of $498 per port.
Read the original article: http://www.channelinsider.com/article/Sun+to+Offer+10G+Ethernet+Across+Its+Product+Line/201421_1.aspx
|