Twinax trivia check (was Re: Is there such a thing as a 10GBase-T SFP+ transciever)

2014-02-02 Thread Larry Sheldon

On 2/1/2014 10:40 PM, Jima wrote:

  +1.  Cisco calls them Twinax, HP calls them DACs.  I don't know what
anyone else calls them as it hasn't come up in conversation for me.


I thought Twinax was an IBMish MILSPEC term.

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Re: Twinax trivia check (was Re: Is there such a thing as a 10GBase-T SFP+ transciever)

2014-02-02 Thread joel jaeggli
On 2/2/14, 7:30 AM, Larry Sheldon wrote:
 On 2/1/2014 10:40 PM, Jima wrote:
   +1.  Cisco calls them Twinax, HP calls them DACs.  I don't know what
 anyone else calls them as it hasn't come up in conversation for me.
 
 I thought Twinax was an IBMish MILSPEC term.

twinax could refer to a specific technology  or to the presence of dual
inner conductors e.g. in contrast to coax or triax.





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Re: Twinax trivia check (was Re: Is there such a thing as a 10GBase-T SFP+ transciever)

2014-02-02 Thread Jay Ashworth
- Original Message -
 From: joel jaeggli joe...@bogus.com

  I thought Twinax was an IBMish MILSPEC term.
 
 twinax could refer to a specific technology or to the presence of dual
 inner conductors e.g. in contrast to coax or triax.

Rather specifically, Twinax refers to cable with 2 center conductors in
it's foam or plastic insulator *both within the same shield* -- generally,
I think always, a balanced pair.

Cheers,
-- jra
-- 
Jay R. Ashworth  Baylink   j...@baylink.com
Designer The Things I Think   RFC 2100
Ashworth  Associates   http://www.bcp38.info  2000 Land Rover DII
St Petersburg FL USA  BCP38: Ask For It By Name!   +1 727 647 1274



Re: Twinax trivia check (was Re: Is there such a thing as a 10GBase-T SFP+ transciever)

2014-02-02 Thread Bryan Tong
These cables are most commonly known as Direct Attach Copper SFP+

On Sunday, February 2, 2014, Jay Ashworth j...@baylink.com wrote:

 - Original Message -
  From: joel jaeggli joe...@bogus.com javascript:;

   I thought Twinax was an IBMish MILSPEC term.
 
  twinax could refer to a specific technology or to the presence of dual
  inner conductors e.g. in contrast to coax or triax.

 Rather specifically, Twinax refers to cable with 2 center conductors in
 it's foam or plastic insulator *both within the same shield* -- generally,
 I think always, a balanced pair.

 Cheers,
 -- jra
 --
 Jay R. Ashworth  Baylink
 j...@baylink.com javascript:;
 Designer The Things I Think   RFC
 2100
 Ashworth  Associates   http://www.bcp38.info  2000 Land
 Rover DII
 St Petersburg FL USA  BCP38: Ask For It By Name!   +1 727 647
 1274



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eSited LLC
(701) 390-9638


Re: Twinax trivia check (was Re: Is there such a thing as a 10GBase-T SFP+ transciever)

2014-02-02 Thread Jeff Kell
On 2/2/2014 4:03 PM, Bryan Tong wrote:
 These cables are most commonly known as Direct Attach Copper SFP+

The big issue appears to be that these are not always consistently
functional crossing vendor lines (sometimes product lines within the
same vendor).  There does not appear to be any standardization in
place.  Not sure how much of this is picky vendor software looking for
branded marks in their transceivers (e.g., Cisco service
unsupported-transceiver) versus true incompatibilities.

We have had issues in test cases crossing vendor lines (Cisco / Brocade
/ Dell / HP) with a twinax link that just simply won't work.  If
anyone has a clear explanation or better understanding, I'm all ears. 
Personal experience comes from only a few testbed cases.

Jeff




RE: Twinax trivia check (was Re: Is there such a thing as a 10GBase-T SFP+ transciever)

2014-02-02 Thread Murphy-Olson, Daniel E.
Most of the switch vendors have an official compatibility list, but I've 
found that generally the most common compatibility issue is active vs passive 
twinax. 

Brocade edge switches and nics are normally active only, which seems to come up 
a lot - because most short cables are passive unless they are brocade branded.  
5m is normally the cutoff for passive twinax.  Pretty much everything else 
I've encountered supports passive.

For a while, the intel x520 nics, which are very common, didn't support active 
connections - but they have since released firmware that fixes this problem.  
Netapp's lower end gear doesn't support active twinax.  



From: Jeff Kell [jeff-k...@utc.edu]
Sent: Sunday, February 02, 2014 3:15 PM
To: Bryan Tong; Jay Ashworth
Cc: NANOG
Subject: Re: Twinax trivia check (was Re: Is there such a thing as a 10GBase-T 
SFP+ transciever)

On 2/2/2014 4:03 PM, Bryan Tong wrote:
 These cables are most commonly known as Direct Attach Copper SFP+

The big issue appears to be that these are not always consistently
functional crossing vendor lines (sometimes product lines within the
same vendor).  There does not appear to be any standardization in
place.  Not sure how much of this is picky vendor software looking for
branded marks in their transceivers (e.g., Cisco service
unsupported-transceiver) versus true incompatibilities.

We have had issues in test cases crossing vendor lines (Cisco / Brocade
/ Dell / HP) with a twinax link that just simply won't work.  If
anyone has a clear explanation or better understanding, I'm all ears.
Personal experience comes from only a few testbed cases.

Jeff





Re: Twinax trivia check (was Re: Is there such a thing as a 10GBase-T SFP+ transciever)

2014-02-02 Thread Brian Loveland
We've worked through the same issues with Brocade/Intel, although we found
that even though Brocade specs active only, our ICX switches don't reject
passive cables, although oddly the Intel branded passive cables show up as
UNSUPPORTED (but FCI and Molex ones from Digikey show up as the correct
length and correct type of cable).
If you do decide to go generic make sure you check the sizing.  Maybe
Brocade SFP+ drive is weak but using some 28 AWG 5M cables we've seen it
takes a lot of errors.  Switching to 26 AWG or 24 AWG solved the issue.  I
suspect Brocade requires active just from their storage background.

On Sun, Feb 2, 2014 at 5:49 PM, Murphy-Olson, Daniel E.
dol...@mcs.anl.govwrote:

 Most of the switch vendors have an official compatibility list, but I've
 found that generally the most common compatibility issue is active vs
 passive twinax.

 Brocade edge switches and nics are normally active only, which seems to
 come up a lot - because most short cables are passive unless they are
 brocade branded.  5m is normally the cutoff for passive twinax.  Pretty
 much everything else I've encountered supports passive.

 For a while, the intel x520 nics, which are very common, didn't support
 active connections - but they have since released firmware that fixes this
 problem.
 Netapp's lower end gear doesn't support active twinax.


 
 From: Jeff Kell [jeff-k...@utc.edu]
 Sent: Sunday, February 02, 2014 3:15 PM
 To: Bryan Tong; Jay Ashworth
 Cc: NANOG
 Subject: Re: Twinax trivia check (was Re: Is there such a thing as a
 10GBase-T SFP+ transciever)

 On 2/2/2014 4:03 PM, Bryan Tong wrote:
  These cables are most commonly known as Direct Attach Copper SFP+

 The big issue appears to be that these are not always consistently
 functional crossing vendor lines (sometimes product lines within the
 same vendor).  There does not appear to be any standardization in
 place.  Not sure how much of this is picky vendor software looking for
 branded marks in their transceivers (e.g., Cisco service
 unsupported-transceiver) versus true incompatibilities.

 We have had issues in test cases crossing vendor lines (Cisco / Brocade
 / Dell / HP) with a twinax link that just simply won't work.  If
 anyone has a clear explanation or better understanding, I'm all ears.
 Personal experience comes from only a few testbed cases.

 Jeff