Vendors are expanding on the 10 Gigabit Ethernet offerings available to customers.
ADVERTISEMENT Myricom
Inc. and startup Level 5 Networks Inc. on Monday are both introducing
new offerings designed to bring the high-speed interconnect into the
data center and high-performance computing environments.
In addition, Neterion Inc., which makes 10GbE adapters, earlier
this month unveiled a channel strategy that it hopes will fuel demand
for its products.
Myricom, of Arcadia, Calif., on Monday is releasing new
switches and NICs (network interface cards) that CEO Chuck Seitz said
bring "the convergence of 10GB Myrinet and 10G Ethernet."
The fourth generation of Myrinet, called Mryi-10G, will be
available in September, Seitz said. The 11-year-old Myrinet
interconnect is widely used in the HPC (high-performance computing)
field. Ethernet, which has been around for almost three decades, is
found in most enterprise data centers. Converging the two interconnect
technologies brings together Myrinet's HPC techniques into the
enterprise, he said.
Myri-10G switches offer between 16 and 128 ports in single
enclosures, with prices as low as $400 per port. The NICs can work with
10GbE or 10G Myrinet switches. In addition, 10G Myrinet switch fabrics
will be able to be connected to 10GbE networks and storage environments
via protocol-conversion devices.
Seitz said the convergence of the two interconnect technologies makes sense for end users.
"Myrinet can do everything that Ethernet can do," Seitz said.
"But the way it works internally [is different]. … It's gradually
becoming more and more Ethernet-like."
Myricom is targeting Myri-10G at compute clusters, grids and data centers.
The Center for Computational Research at the University at
Buffalo-State University of New York has been using Myrinet fabrics in
its compute clusters since the late 1990s. Center Director Russ Miller
said he plans to incorporate the new Myri-10G into the center, saying
it will improve performance in areas such as grids and visualization.
"In addition, the new 10G fabric should allow for a seamless
multiuse network incorporating storage, administrative and HPC
communication needs, in comparison to having multiple networks as we do
today," Miller said.
For its part, Level 5 Networks, of Sunnyvale, Calif., is
announcing EtherFabric, a combination of software and silicon that CEO
Dan Karr said will increase application performance and bandwidth
capabilities in HPC environments and data centers while reducing
latency by as much as five times over conventional Ethernet offerings.
It more than doubles the efficiency of CPUs in the environment, which
will result in better performance.
A key to EtherFabric is backward compatibility with existing
Ethernet environments, requiring no new protocols or application
modifications.
"Nothing changes at all [when implementing EtherFabric]," Karr
said. "The same binary [code] comes over and it just works. There are
no changes to the applications, operating systems [or] protocols."
EtherFabric is available this month for 1Gb Ethernet
environments, and it will support 10GbE in the first half of 2006. It
also supports PCI and PCI-X now and will support PCI-Express by the end
of this year.
Neterion, of Cupertino, Calif., this month kicked off a VAR and
systems integrator program to help push sales of its suite of 10 GbE
Xframe adapters. Tracy Crowe, director of market development and
alliances for Neterion, said the program will broaden the company's
distribution points to include both OEMs and channel partners.
Currently such OEMs as Hewlett-Packard Co., Sun Microsystems
Inc., Silicon Graphics Inc. and Cray Inc. have signed up to use
Neterion technology. Crowe said the goal of the new channel program is
not only to fuel sales but also to educate the market about the
benefits of 10GbE. Analyst firm IDC says 10GbE technology should
surpass sales of 1GbE products by 2007.
Neterion's channel program will include a partner Web site that
will offer an information portal, technical data and updates, Crowe
said. There also will be dedicated support and training for channel
partners, a starter kit that includes evaluation units and tools, and
lead generation help, he said.
"Our goal is to build the ecosystem and working with ISVs and system integrators as part of the system," Crowe said.
Editor's Note: This story was updated to include comments from Russ Miller.
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