Breaking News - Networking:
S2io To Offer 10 GbE Technology For Sun's Solaris OS
S2io Inc announced that drivers for its Xframe 10 Gigabit Ethernet Adapter
will be integrated into Sun Microsystems Inc's Solaris Operating System (OS)
for SPARC, AMD Opteron and Intel Xeon based systems. In addition, S2io will
be working with Sun to deliver a TCP/IP offload engine (TOE) with RDMA
functionality to enhance performance and scalability in intense compute/server
environments.
The industry-leading Solaris OS is designed to provide customers with a
secure, available and high-performance platform for mission-critical workloads
and key enterprise applications. Combining Xframe, S2io's 10 Gigabit Ethernet
Adapter, with the new high-performance TCP/IP architecture in Solaris, also
known as project FireEngine, will offer customers inherent performance
advantages.
"Working with S2io will help us to jointly address customer demand for higher
levels of server performance due to the exponential growth of data," said
Glenn Weinberg, vice president of the Operating Platforms Group at Sun
Microsystems. "Sun's work on streamlining the IP stack for Solaris 10,
together with Xframe's 10 Gigabit Ethernet capabilities, will allow customers
to benefit from significantly enhanced throughput, performance and scalability
in their IT infrastructures."
In high-end compute/server environments, Xframe's 10 Gigabit Ethernet adapter
can deliver up to a six to eight times increase in performance, a 50 percent
reduction in latency and a six- to eight-fold reduction in cabling expense.
And since the Ethernet protocol is retained, no additional training is
required for data center personnel.
"We're very pleased for this opportunity to work with Sun, a company known
worldwide for its innovative products," stated Dave Zabrowski, president and
CEO of S2io. "This is another clear example of the growing demand for 10
Gigabit Ethernet and its unique ability to offer a clear path for server
optimization while protecting existing data center investment."
S2io will also be working with Sun to develop an offload engine with RDMA
capabilities. The biggest bottleneck in data centers today is the interface
between servers. This is caused by traditional bus architectures that require
servers to place too many processing demands on the host CPU. Traditionally,
servers have to copy data between application memory and the kernel, which can
result in significant degradation in performance as the CPU becomes
overloaded.
Servers equipped with RDMA-enabled offload engines, or R-NICs, can share
memory with zero copying and bypass the kernel, even from remote locations and
this enables the servers to focus on processing applications. The result is
wire-speed connectivity that will allow networked servers and storage devices
to transmit data at rates exceeding 10 gigabits per second. Data center
management will see dramatically reduced latency, exponential increases in
bandwidth performance, yet they can still maintain their existing
infrastructure because the network is based on the ubiquitous Ethernet
protocol.
About Sun Microsystems Inc
Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision -- "The Network Is The
Computer" -- has propelled Sun Microsystems Inc to its position as a provider
of industrial-strength hardware, software and services that make the Net work.
Sun can be found in more than 100 countries and on the World Wide Web at
sun.com.
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