Cyan's stackable optical rack for data centre interconnent 
Wednesday, March 4, 2015 at 7:01AM
Roy Rubenstein in CFP2 analogue coherent optics, Clariphy, Cyan, Infinera, Joe Cumello, N-Series, QSFP28, White Box, data centre interconnect, original design manufacturers

Demand for high-capacity links between data centres is creating a new class of stackable optical platform from equipment makers. Cyan has unveiled the N-Series, what it calls an open hyperscale transport platform. "It is a hardware and software system specifically for data centre interconnect," says Joe Cumello, Cyan's chief marketing officer. Cyan's announcement follows on from Infinera, which detailed its Cloud Xpress platform last year.

 

"The drivers for these [data centre] guys every day of the week is lowest cost-per-gigabit"

Joe Cumello

 

 

 

 

 

The amount of traffic moved between data centres can be huge. According to ACG Research, certain cloud-based applications shared between data centres can require between 40 to 500 terabits of capacity. This could be to link adjacent data centre buildings to appear as one large logical one, or connect data centres across a metro, 20 km to 200 km apart. For data centres separated across greater distances, traditional long-haul links are typically sufficient.

Cyan says it developed the N-series platform following conversations conducted with internet content providers over the last two years. "We realised that the white box movement would make its way into the data centre interconnect space," says Cumello.

White box servers and white box switches, manufactured by original design manufacturers (ODMs), are already being used in the data centre due to their lower cost. Cyan is using a similar approach for its N-Series, using commercial-off-the-shelf hardware and open software.

"The drivers for these [data centre] guys every day of the week is lowest cost-per-gigabit," says Cumello.

 

N-Series platform

Cyan's N-Series N11 is a 1-rack-unit (1RU) box that has a total capacity of 800 Gigabit-per-second (Gbps). The 1RU shelf comprises two units, each using two client-side 100Gbps QSFP28s and a line-side interface that supports 100 Gbps coherent transmission using PM-QPSK, or 200 Gbps coherent using PM-16QAM. The transmission capacity can be traded with reach: using 100 Gbps, optical transmission up to 2,000 km is possible, while capacity can be doubled using 200 Gbps lightpaths for links up to 600 km. Cyan is using Clariphy's CL20010 coherent transceiver/ framer chip. Stacking 42 of the 1RUs within a chassis results in an overall capacity - client side and line side - of 33.6 terabit.

 

There is a whole ecosystem of companies competing to drive better capacity and scale

 

The N-Series N11 uses a custom line-side design but Cyan says that by adopting commercial-off-the-shelf design, it will benefit from the pluggable line-side optical module roadmap. The roadmap includes 200 Gbps and 400 Gbps coherent MSA modules, pluggable CFP2 and CFP4 analogue coherent optics, and the CFP2 digital coherent optics that also integrates the DSP-ASIC.

"There is a whole ecosystem of companies competing to drive better capacity and scale," says Cumello. "By using commercial-off-the-shelf technology, we are going to get to better scale, better density, better energy efficiency and better capacity."

To support these various options, Cyan has designed the chassis to support 1RU shelves with several front plate options including a single full-width unit, two half-width ones as used for the N11, or four quarter-width units.   

 

Open software

For software, the N-series platform uses a Linux networking operating system. Using Linux enables third-party applications to run on the N-series, and enables IT staff to use open source tools they already know. "The data centre guys use Linux and know how to run servers and switches so we have provided that kind of software through Cyan's Linux," says Cumello. Cyan has also developed its own networking applications for configuration management, protocol handling and statistics management that run on the Linux operating system.

 

The open software architecture of the N-Series. Also shown are the two units that make up a rack. Source: Cyan.

"We have essentially disaggregated the software from the hardware," says Cumello. Should a data centre operator chooses a future, cheaper white box interconnect product, he says, Cyan's applications and Linux networking operating system will still run on that platform.    

The N-series will be available for customer trials in the second quarter and will be available commercially from the third quarter of 2015.        

Article originally appeared on Gazettabyte (https://www.gazettabyte.com/).
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