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  5. Scaling internet routers using optics

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Article
English
2003

Scaling internet routers using optics

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English
2003
DOI: 10.1145/863977.863978

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Mark Horowitz
Mark Horowitz

Stanford University

Verified
Isaac Keslassy
Shang-Tse Chuang
Kyoungsik Yu
+4 more

Abstract

Routers built around a single-stage crossbar and a centralized scheduler do not scale, and (in practice) do not provide the throughput guarantees that network operators need to make efficient use of their expensive long-haul links. In this paper we consider how optics can be used to scale capacity and reduce power in a router. We start with the promising load-balanced switch architecture proposed by C-S. Chang. This approach eliminates the scheduler, is scalable, and guarantees 100% throughput for a broad class of traffic. But several problems need to be solved to make this architecture practical: (1) Packets can be mis-sequenced, (2) Pathological periodic traffic patterns can make throughput arbitrarily small, (3) The architecture requires a rapidly configuring switch fabric, and (4) It does not work when linecards are missing or have failed. In this paper we solve each problem in turn, and describe new architectures that include our solutions. We motivate our work by designing a 100Tb/s packet-switched router arranged as 640 linecards, each operating at 160Gb/s. We describe two different implementations based on technology available within the next three years.

How to cite this publication

Isaac Keslassy, Shang-Tse Chuang, Kyoungsik Yu, David Miller, Mark Horowitz, Olav Solgaard, Nick McKeown (2003). Scaling internet routers using optics. , DOI: 10.1145/863977.863978.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2003

Authors

7

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

DOI

10.1145/863977.863978

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