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10Gb Ethernet Alliance is Formed
Posted by
Zonk
on Thu Apr 17, 2008 11:27 AM
from the ethernet-alliance-powers-activate dept.
from the ethernet-alliance-powers-activate dept.
Lucas123 writes "Nine storage and networking vendors have created a consortium to promote the use of 10GbE. The group views it as the future of a combined LAN/SAN infrastructure. They highlight the spec's ability to pool and virtualize server I/O, storage and network resources and to manage them together to reduce complexity. By combining block and file storage on one network, they say, you can cut costs by 50% and simplify IT administration. 'Compared to 4Gbit/sec Fibre Channel, a 10Gbit/sec Ethernet-based storage infrastructure can cut storage network costs by 30% to 75% and increases bandwidth by 2.5 times.'"
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Math on /. (Score:5, Funny)
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Do you have a citation for that? I've seen Ethernet networks with decent switches approach 95% of the rated capacity.
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Modern ethernet 100Base-T switched or 1000Base-T can work to 100%. With the switched medium all the links run full duplex and packets for busy links are stored in memory like a router. With a good switch packets for non-busy links get 'wormholed' to the output before they arrive (arrive completely that is).
Normally this means that modern lans won't lose any packets; if your lan is losing packets you have a hardware problem. Perhaps you have an unswitched hub somewhere or a seriously overloaded switch tha
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CSMA/CD is still important in modern ethernet networks, due to the fact that some devices do not properly auto-negotiate. Some devices doesn't obey the RFC's for interpacket spacing in an effort to improve their throughput that can wreak havoc on networks.
In many cases, if a link fails auto negotiation
Re:Math on /. (Score:4, Informative)
Parent
Fibre only? (Score:5, Interesting)
"The draft standard for 10 Gigabit Ethernet is significantly different in some respects from earlier Ethernet standards, primarily
in that it will only function over optical fiber, and only operate in full-duplex mode"
There are vendors, such as Tyco Electronic's AMP NetConnect line, that have 10G over copper. Has this been discarded in the standard revision?
Re:Fibre only? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Fibre only? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Maybe you are thinking about 9micron singlemode fiber?
Re:Fibre only? (Score:4, Funny)
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Misleading Title. (Score:2, Insightful)
Block storage? (Score:3, Interesting)
By combining block and file storage on one network, they say, you can cut costs by 50% and simplify IT administration.
What is "block" storage?
Re:Block storage? (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
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No. If you send packets requesting blocks of data on a region of disk space, without any indication of a file to which they belong, that's block storage. If you send packets opening (or otherwise getting a handle for) a file, packets to read particular regi
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Your hard drive is a block device. A SAN just uses some protocols to make the OS treat a remote storage as a local disk (Think of it as scsi going over the network, instead of a local cable, which is almost exactly what iSCSI is). You can format, defrag, etc. The OS does not know that the device isn't insid
SCI, Infiniband (Score:2)
I can do this already. Up to 90 odd Gbit.
Ethernet will have to be cheap.
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bandwidth = performance ? (Score:5, Interesting)
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-Rick
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I'd have to wonder what kind of config you're running then. I've gotten 90MB per second over $15 RTL8169 cards and a $70 D-Link gigabit switch. Between consumer grade pc's running ietd on linux to a linux iscsi initiator. I have no doubt that 10GB ethernet will wipe the floor with FC.
Remember the planning phase when the iSCSI sales rep promised better performance per $ than SAN?
Remember the planning phase when the SAN vendor promised cheaper storage
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However, the best advantage of iSCSI over FC is replication. How much extra infrastructure and technologies do you need to replicate to a site 1000
Bonding for Unlimited Bandwidth (Score:2)
Is there even a way to do this now with 1Gb-e, or even 100Mbps-e? So all I have to do is add daughtercards to an ethernet card, or multiple cards to a host bus, and let the kernel do the rest, with minimal extra latency?
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yes, look up "etherchannel" or "bonding"
Wow, that takes me back years. A little over 10 years ago, straight out of college and not knowing any better I purchased the "cisco etherchannel interconnect" kit for their catalyst switches. I had to work hard to track down a cisco reseller that actually had it (which should have been a clue). When I finally got it, the entire "kit" contents were, I kid you not, two cross connect cat5 cables. I learned an important lesson about marketing that day.
-Em
P.S. In all fairness to Cisco the cost of the kit was a
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Cost? (Score:2)
I'm also noticing that most if not all of my systems never even tap the bandwidth available on a pair of 4Gb FC ports, let alone 10Gb. I'm sure there are folks out there who need it, but it aint us.
Of course, our corporate standard is Cisco, so I'm su
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The 10Gb ports aren't really about the hosts (today anyhow). They're generally more useful for the connections to large storage arrays which can push that kind of bandwidth, you'd be able to fan in more hosts to each storage array port.
Channel bonding (Score:3, Informative)
look forward to the new standard (Score:2)
Further blurring the distinction (Score:2)
Will there ever be "enough" bandwidth to a home? (Score:4, Interesting)
I can't think of anyone who's longing to get a fatter gas pipe connected to their house, or a fatter pipe to municipal water, or a cable of higher capacity to bring in more electricity.
But we're not like that with bandwidth. We always seem to want a fatter pipe of bandwidth! Will it forever be like that? Is the household bandwidth consumption ever going to plateau, like electric, gas and water consumption has in the US? (I know that global demand for these utilities is growing, but that's mainly because there are more people and a larger proportion are being hooked up to municipal utilities. The per-household numbers are not really changing very much, and in some cases decreasing.)
Will there be a plateau in bandwidth demand? If so, when and at what level? Thoughts?
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Sheesh