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Re: 9.584640




On the 'market potential' for 10 Gig Ethernet in the MAN/WAN, I would defer
to the opinion and marketing data from larger equipment suppliers and their
carrier customers. There are a number of participants in the HSSG that can
shed light on this topic. As an example I suggest referring to:

http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/3/10G_study/public/july99/chen_1_0799.pdf

On the question of complexity of the LAN switch design and multiple clock
issue, products today with 10/100 and Gigabit Ethernet interfaces already
have multiple clock domains. The 'transceiver' clock, MAC/PLS, switching
fabric/backplane and CPU/management subsystem are all likely to have
different and out of phase clocks.

On the 'flow control': 10 Gig Ethernet is most likely going to be used to
aggregate many flows. Throttling such an aggregated packet stream, without
paying attention to individual flows, is not desirable.

Nader Vijeh
Lantern Communications

-----Original Message-----
From: Rich Taborek <rtaborek@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: Paul Bottorff <pbottorf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; HSSG
<stds-802-3-hssg@xxxxxxxx>
Date: Wednesday, July 21, 1999 6:09 PM
Subject: Re: 9.584640



Paul,

Vacation!!! What's a vacation???

Thanks for taking the time out to respond. I'd like you to review my
original note
on this thread to see where you stand based on your agreement that 9.584640
Gbps
as being the "perfect" Ethernet for matching to OC-192 SONET. Here is the
text of
that note:

In my conversations with several folks on both sides of the issue during the
Montreal meetings, I've come to the conclusion that the root reasons to
select
either a 10 or 9.584640 Gbps are purely ease-of implementation based and
have no
architectural basis whatsoever. I believe this to be true on both sides of
the
argument with the choice of one over the other, rendering the implementation
(i.e. product cost) of the losing side only slightly more difficult. Please
allow me to explain the basis of this contention:

1) SONET, and specifically synchronous transport, is legacy in the MAN and
WAN,
will never be replaced by Ethernet completely or even quickly. Ethernet will
make inroads into "green-field" applications, but SONET will be king for
some
time to come;

2) Ethernet, and specifically packet-based transport, is legacy in the LAN,
is
growing in its dominance in the LAN, and will likely gain market share in
the
LAN as well as encroach on other non-traditional Ethernet transports
including
MAN, SAN, and some WAN. I don't include WAN access in WAN. Instead I include
WAN
access in LAN or MAN;

3) The existing WAN infrastructure does a great job of transporting Ethernet
packets end-to-end today. However, much protocol conversion and equipment to
map
between packets and TDM bits exists in mapping Ethernet to the WAN at each
end.
Considerable savings can be realized by architecting a more seamless
Ethernet to
SONET connection. This issue seems to be at the root of the 10 vs. 9.584640
Gbps
issue.

4) There seems to be no intent by either side to consider any other changes
but
speed as a HSSG objective. Therefore, Ethernet will remain a simple, general
purpose, packet-based transport, and SONET will remain a specific purpose
(MAN/WAN), synchronous transport no matter which way the decision goes.

5) Consider a Ethernet to OC-192 line card (feeding a fiber or wavelength)
in
operation. Assume that receive and transmit paths are separate on the SONET
side
and related (i.e. full duplex) on the Ethernet side:
  a) Ethernet -> SONET @ 9.584640 Gbps: The Ethernet side can continuously
feed
the SONET link with no flow control required.
  b) Ethernet -> SONET @ 10 Gbps: The Ethernet side must be flow controlled
to
prevent over-feeding the SONET link
  c) SONET -> Ethernet @ 9.584640 or 10 Gbps: The Ethernet side can
continuously
source SONET data but will flow control or drop packets downstream whenever
the
network is congested.

Therefore, the issue boils down to one of implementation of existing
Ethernet
mechanisms such as 802.3x flow control or a reasonable facsimile on the line
card versus complicating the implementation of all Ethernet products which
must
support a MAC/PLS rate which is not a multiple of 10. These implementation
difficulties include multiple clocks which may "beat" against each other,
not
being able to easily feed 10 slower links into one faster one, and numerous
other difficulties which are best listed by Ethernet product implementers.

My intention is not to make light of the problem but rather to agree with a
solution direction along the line proposed by Dan Dove of HP at the Montreal
meeting. I believe that Dan's general direction was to tradeoff a simple
architectural change with respect to MAC operation to enable cost effective
10
Gbps to SONET implementations. I don't particularly agree with resolving
implementation cost issues between two dominant legacy protocols by tweaking
with the underlying architecture, but I'll raise my hand in support of this
solution to the problem.

Such a solution would enable the implementation of a 10 Gbps Ethernet to
SONET
OC-192 line card without requiring a full MAC.

I'll let Dan fill in the details of his proposal so I don't get it wrong if
it
is still applicable.

Best Regards,
Rich

--

Paul Bottorff wrote:

> Toshio, Rich:
>
> Sorry for dropping in a little late, but I'm supposed to be on vacation.
>
> The 9.584640 is the exact rate of a OC-192 payload. Running at this rate
> will allow the data to be encoded onto an OC-192 directly at rate. In
> addition, this data rate allows running over the installed base of 10 G
> DWDM regenerator networks.
>
> To encode a 9.584640 G Ethernet steam on an OC-192 the encoding system
must
> not expand the data like 8b/10b does. Both the Nortel and the Lucent
> proposals are capable of providing an encode which can be transported a
> 9.584640 G Ethernet data stream over OC-192.
>
> Paul
>
> At 02:29 PM 7/20/99 -0700, Rich Taborek wrote:
> >
> >Toshio,
> >
> >I believe that the framing solution is a second-order task and that the
first
> >order task is to determine if there is any possibility of supporting an
> >Ethernet stream, consisting of variable sized packets at ANY MAC/PLS data
> rate
> >which would eliminate any flow control requirements between Ethernet and
> SONET
> >OC-192.
> >
> >Is 9.584640 Gbps this data rate? If not, is there any data rate that
meets
> the
> >above requirement? If not, the HSSG speed objective should be 10.0 Gbps.
> >
> >Best Regards,
> >Rich
> >
> >--
> >
> >Toshio Ooka wrote:
> >
> >> Rich,
> >>
> >> > I have assumed that the proponents of the 9.584640 Gbps MAC/PLS
> >> > payload rate have selected that rate specifically to allow a SONET
> links to
> >>
> >> > accept Ethernet payload at full rate as indicated in my #5a (below).
> >> I believe that the rate specifically to allow a SONET links to accept
> >> Ethernet payload
> >> is great idea.
> >>
> >> But to realize this idea, I think we need to have some framing
solution.
> >> After framing process, the length of the data on SONET will not
affected
> >> the content of the Ethernet payload data. POS solution is not suitable
for
> >> this.
> >>
> >> Send Ethernet 10B code to SONET may be to fit SONET byte stream world.
> >>
> >> Thank you for your prompt reply.
> >>
> >> Best Regards,
> >> Toshio
> >> ----
> >> Toshio Ooka @Sumitomo Electric U.S.A., Inc.
> >> 3235 Kifer Rd, #150, Santa Clara, CA 95051-0185
> >> Phone:(408)737-8517x232    Fax(408)737-0134
> >
> >-------------------------------------------------------------
> >Richard Taborek Sr.    Tel: 650 210 8800 x101 or 408 370 9233
> >Principal Architect         Fax: 650 940 1898 or 408 374 3645
> >Transcendata, Inc.           Email: rtaborek@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >1029 Corporation Way              http://www.transcendata.com
> >Palo Alto, CA 94303-4305    Alt email: rtaborek@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >
> >
> >
> >
> Paul A. Bottorff, Director Switching Architecture
> Bay Architecture Laboratory
> Nortel Networks, Inc.
> 4401 Great America Parkway
> Santa Clara, CA 95052-8185
> Tel: 408 495 3365 Fax: 408 495 1299 ESN: 265 3365
> email: pbottorf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

-------------------------------------------------------------
Richard Taborek Sr.    Tel: 650 210 8800 x101 or 408 370 9233
Principal Architect         Fax: 650 940 1898 or 408 374 3645
Transcendata, Inc.           Email: rtaborek@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
1029 Corporation Way              http://www.transcendata.com
Palo Alto, CA 94303-4305    Alt email: rtaborek@xxxxxxxxxxxxx