Breaking News - Networking:
Chelsio 10 GbE Adapters Set LAN Distance, Bandwidth Records
Chelsio Communications Inc provided the critical technology to set new world
records for LAN bandwidth and distance, dominating the annual Bandwidth
Challenge competition at the Supercomputing 2004 conference in Pittsburgh
earlier this month.
The University of Tokyo shattered the world record for speed and distance of
Internet communication, sending standard 1500 byte Ethernet packets more than
31,000 kilometers at more than 7 Gb per second totaling 225,000TB meters per
second to win the SC2004 Bandwidth Challenge award for single stream distance
and bandwidth.
The Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), together with its partners,
achieved the highest aggregate bandwidth ever recorded to win the SC2004
Bandwidth Challenge award for sustained bandwidth, delivering 101 Gb per
second, which quadruples the previous throughput record set a year ago.
Chelsio's T110 10GbE Protocol Engine provided the TCP/IP offload technology
breakthrough used in both the University of Tokyo's and SLAC's bandwidth
challenge demonstrations, dramatically improving application performance. By
offloading processor-intensive networking and storage protocol stacks from
overburdened processors, Chelsio can process 10 Gigabit Ethernet and return
processing cycles to the application to enhance overall system performance.
With an application-to-application latency of less than 10 microseconds, the
T110 adapter enables 10Gb Ethernet to be deployed in a wider range of data
center and Grid computing applications in the enterprise. The ubiquitous
Ethernet technology will quickly make possible a dramatically lower total cost
of ownership by leveraging existing resources, such as applications and
management tools, and IT networking expertise.
Chelsio, University Of Tokyo Shatter Distance And Speed Record
The University of Tokyo established a new distance and speed record, sending
standard 1500 byte Ethernet packets 31,248 kilometers from the exhibition in
Pittsburgh through Tokyo to the CERN research facility in Geneva, Switzerland.
This demonstration shatters the previous record by more than 80 percent.
"The TCP/IP offload capability of Chelsio's T110 is the first in the world to
enable very high-speed, reliable TCP data transfer between very distant
places. Our world record achievement could not have been realized without the
flexibility and reliability of the T110 protocol engine," said Professor Kei
Hiraki, chairman of the Computer Science Department at the University of Tokyo
and leader of the Japanese Data Reservoir project. "Achieving such high
performance using standard 1500-byte Ethernet packets is very important for
practical use of this technology since use of larger, non-standard Jumbo
packets on the internet has compatibility and reliability issues."
The data transfer was achieved between a pair of data-sharing Opteron systems
from the Data Reservoir project, one server placed at the SC2004 exhibition
booth of the University of Tokyo and another at CERN, each equipped with a
Chelsio T110 10 Gigabit Ethernet adapter supporting TCP/IP offload. A transfer
rate of 7.21 Gbps was sustained for more than 15 minutes using a single TCP
stream and standard 1500-byte Ethernet frames over the 31,248 kilometer link.
The combined bandwidth times distance value is a new world record at 225,298
terabit meters per second and is 80 percent greater than the Internet2 Land
Speed Record of 124,935 terabit meters per second. At this transfer rate and
distance, a full-length DVD can be transferred anywhere on the earth in less
than five seconds.
Chelsio, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center Set New Bandwidth Record
SLAC teamed up with CalTech, Fermilab, CERN, the University of Manchester, Sun
Microsystems and Chelsio to aggregate and transfer large sets of data. Using a
total of ten 10 gigabit links, the team successfully transferred an aggregate
of 101 Gbps of data to many host labs and research institutions around the
world. This shattered the previous record of 23 Gb per second, set at the
SC2003 conference, and exceeded the sum of all the throughput marks submitted
in the present and previous years by other Bandwidth Challenge entrants. With
101Gbps throughput one could transfer all the books and other printed
materials at the Library of Congress in under 15 minutes, or the equivalent of
three full-length DVD movies in about one second.
"Our tests showed that the TCP Offload Engine (TOE) interfaces performed
reliably on uncongested local and trans-continental networks, achieving TCP
throughputs with 1500 byte packets that were limited only by the bus bandwidth
of the computers. Using two computers at each end, we were able to utilize all
the bandwidth of a 10 gigabit per second path. The TOE also successfully
reduced the CPU utilization by about a third compared to a non-TOE 10 Gb per
second network interface," said Dr. Les Cottrell, assistant director of SLAC's
Computing Services and leader of the SLAC Bandwidth Challenge team.
Chelsio's T110 10 Gigabit Ethernet adapters with full TCP/IP offload were used
on many of the links and achieved 7.72 Gb per second throughput in one
direction on one of the links.
The experiment provided a preview of the globally distributed Grid system that
is now being developed in the US and Europe in preparation for the next
generation of high energy physics experiments at CERN's Large Hadron Collider
(LHC), scheduled to begin operation in 2007. The largest physics
collaborations at the LHC, CMS and ATLAS, each encompass more than 2,000
physicists and engineers from 160 universities and laboratories spread around
the globe. Optical networks incorporating multiple 10 Gigabit per second links
are the foundation of the Grid system that will drive new scientific
discoveries and lead to new models for how research and business is performed.
Scientists will be empowered to form "virtual organizations" on a planetary
scale, sharing in a flexible way their collective computing and data
resources, leading to the deployment of a new generation of revolutionary
Internet applications.
"This is a breakthrough for the development of global networks and Grids, as
well as inter-regional cooperation in science projects at the high energy
frontier. We demonstrated that multiple links of various bandwidths, up to the
10 Gbps range can be used effectively over long distances," said Harvey
Newman, professor of physics at Caltech. "There are profound implications for
how we could integrate information sharing and on-demand audiovisual
collaboration in our daily lives, with a scale and quality previously
unimaginable."
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