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On Sat, 11 Apr 2020, Dave Taht wrote:

The way I've basically looked at things since 25Gbit ethernet was that
improvements in single stream throughput were dead. I see a lot of
work on out of order delivery tolerance as an outgrowth of that,
but... am I wrong?

Backbone ISPs today are built with lots of parallel links (20x100GE for instance) and then we do L4 hashing for flows across these. This means a single L4 flow is capped at less than 100GE. This is not a huge problem but we're always trying to get faster and faster ports for single flow (and for other reasons).

We're now going for 100 gigabit/s per lane (it's been going up from 4x2.5G for 10GE to 1x10G, then we went for lane speeds of 10G, 25G, 50G and now we're at 100G per lane), and it seems the 800GE in your link has 8 lanes of that. This means a single L4 flow can be 800GE even though it's in reality 8x100G lanes, as a single packet bits are being sprayed across all the lanes.

The lane speeds are going up and up, and this relates to PCI-E as well, but it's not fast enough to we're going wider as well (think equivalent PCI-E x16).

Out the port we're trying to DWDM long-haul transmissions and we're getting closer and closer to the shannon limit and we're throwing lots of DSP at the problem (the new DSPs are 7nm and they already have 5nm and 3nm roadmaps for these DSPs to keep power down).

--
Mikael Abrahamsson    email: swm...@swm.pp.se

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