Fiber Optics FIBER vs. COPPER in Data Center

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FIBER vs. COPPER in Data Center Ergyn Sadiku 04-20-09
Posted by Ergyn Sadiku on April 20, 2009, 10:18 am
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In most data center designs there is a mixture of both copper and
fiber infrastructure. This paper is not suggesting that one should
replace the other, rather that each should be considered carefully
with respect to the applications expected to be supported over the
life of the data center. With varied capabilities of networking
equipment and cabling options, a thorough analysis should be performed
to plan the most cost effective data center infrastructure to maximize
your return on investment.

Power and Cooling Efficiencies

There are several factors driving data center specifiers and decision
makers to revise, remediate, relocate or consolidate current data
centers. Power and cooling are two of the more significant factors. In
many legacy data centers, older-model air-handling units operate at
roughly 80% efficiency at best, measured in terms of electrical use
per ton of cooling (kW/ton). Newer units operate at between 95-98%
efficiency depending on the manufacturer and model. In some instances,
it is more cost effective for companies to write off unrealized
depreciation in order to receive the efficiency benefits of the newer
units.

But with any cooling equipment, conditions apart from the cooling unit
itself can have a significant impact on efficiency. Simple steps like
removing abandoned cable from pathways to reduce air dams and maximize
air flow, installing brush guards or air pillows to maintain static
pressure under the floor, and redressing cabling within cabinets to
lessen impedance of front to back airflow, are all beneficial and are
forcing companies to look at these and other relatively simple
upgrades for improving power and cooling efficiencies. With green/
ecological and power reduction initiatives swaying today's decisions,
the circular relationship between power consumption and cooling is
bringing facilities back into the discussions for selecting network
equipment (e.g., servers, switches, SANs).

Increasing Storage and Bandwidth Trends

In addition to requirements for faster processing and lower power
consumption, recent changes in legislation and mandates for data
retention (Sarbanes Oxley for example) are driving storage costs up.
While these vary by industry, governance and company policy, there is
no question that storage and data retrieval requirements are on the
rise. According to IDC=B9, "281 exabytes of information existed in 2007,
or about 45 Gb for every person on earth." As with any other equipment
in the data center, the more data you have and transfer, the more
bandwidth you will need. To support faster communications, there are a
growing number of high-speed data transmission protocols and cabling
infrastructures available, each with varying requirements for power
and physical interfaces.

To meet these increasing demands for bandwidth in the data center, 10
Gb/s applications over balanced twisted-pair cabling, twinax cabling
and optical fiber cabling are growing. The Dell'Oro Group, a market
research firm, predicts that copper- based 10 GbE will expand to
represent 42% of the projected 8.8M 10GbE units by 2010=B2. A study by
the Linley Group indicated that: "...by 2009, we expect 10GbE
shipments to be well in excess of one million ports. The fast-growing
bladeserver market will drive the demand for 10GbE switches. At the
physical layer, the 10GbE market will go through several
transitions. . . including a shift to 10GBASE-T for copper wiring." =B3

10 Gb/S Infrastructure Options

There are several cabling alternatives available over which 10 Gb/s
can be accomplished. Infiniband is one option. The single biggest
advantage of Infiniband is that it has far lower latency (around one
microsecond) than TCP/IP and Ethernet based applications, as there is
much less overhead in this transmission protocol. Infiniband is
gaining popularity in cluster and grid computing environments not only
for storage, but as a low latency, high performance LAN interconnect
with power consumption at approximately 5 Watts per port on average.

A single Infiniband lane is 2.5 Gb/s, and 4 lanes result in 10 Gb/s
operations in SDR (Single Data Rate) mode and 20 Gb/s in DDR (Dual
Data Rate) mode. Interfaces for Infiniband include twinax (CX4) type
connectors and optical fiber connectors: even balanced twisted-pair
cabling is now supported through Annex A54. The most dominant
Infiniband connector today, however, utilizes twinax in either a 4x (4
lane) or 12x (12 lane) serial communication. These applications are
limited to 3-15 m depending on manufacturer, which may be a limiting
factor in some data centers. Optical Fiber Infiniband consumes
approximately 1 Watt per port, but at a port cost of nearly 2x that of
balanced twisted-pair. Active cable assemblies are also available that
convert copper CX4 cable to optical fiber cable and increase the
distance from 3-15 m to 300 m, although this is an expensive option
and creates an additional point of failure and introduces latency at
each end of the cable. One drawback to the CX4 Infiniband cable is
diameter which is 0.549 cm (0.216 in) for 30 AWG and 0.909 cm (0.358
in) for 24 AWG cables.

With the release of the IEEE 802.3an standard, 10 Gb/s over balanced
twisted-pair cabling (10GBASE-T) is the fastest growing and is
expected to be the most widely adopted 10GbE option. Because category
6A/class EA and category 7/class F or category 7A/class FA cabling
offer much better attenuation and crosstalk performance than existing
category 6 cabling, the standard specified Short Reach Mode for these
types of cabling systems. Higher performing cabling simplifies power
reduction in the PHY devices for Short Reach Mode (under 30 m). Power
back off (low power mode) is an option to reduce power consumption
compared to category 6 or longer lengths of class EA, class F or class
FA channels. Data center links less than or equal to 30 meters can
take advantage of this power savings expected to roughly 50% depending
on manufacturer.

The IEEE 802.3 10GBASE-T criteria states a goal that "the 10GBASE-T
PHY device is projected to meet the 3x cost versus 10x performance
guidelines applied to previous advanced Ethernet standards" . This
means that balanced twisted-pair compatible electronics, when they
become commercially affordable, and not simply commercially available,
will provide multiple speeds at a very attractive price point,
relative to the cost of optical fiber compatible electronics. As
maintenance is based on original equipment purchase price, not only
will day-one costs be lower, but day-two costs will also be lower.
Latency on first generation balanced twisted-pair compatible
electronics chips is already faster than that written in the standard
with latency near 2.5 microseconds.

At 1 Gb/s speeds, balanced twisted-pair compatible electronics offer
better latency performance than fiber; however, considering latency at
10 Gb/s, currently fiber components perform better than balanced
twisted-pair compatible 10GBASE-T electronics, but not as well as 10
Gb/s Infiniband/CX4. However, this will likely change with future
generation 10GBASE-T chips for copper switches. It is important to
remember that in optical transmissions, equipment needs to perform an
electrical to optical conversion, which contributes to latency.

Balanced twisted-pair remains the dominant media for the majority of
data center cabling links. According to a recent BSRIA press release:
". . .survey results highlight a rush to higher speeds in data
centers; a broad choice of copper cabling categories for 10G,
especially shielded; and a copper / fiber split of 58:42 by volume.
75% of respondents who plan to choose copper cabling for their 10G
links plan for shielded cabling, relatively evenly split between
categories 6, 6a and 7. OM3 has a relatively low uptake at the moment
in U.S. data centers. The choice for fiber is still heavily cost
related, but appears to be gaining some traction with those who want
to future-proof for 100G and those not willing to wait for 10 Gb/s or
40 Gb/s copper connectivity and equipment." 5

Optical fiber-based 10Gb/s applications are the most mature 10GbE
option, although designed originally for backbone applications and as
an aggregation for gigabit links. Fiber's longer reach makes the
additional cost of fiber electronics worthwhile when serving backbone
links longer than 90 meters. But using optical fiber for shorter data
center cabling links can be cost prohibitive.

Mixing both balanced twisted-pair cabling and optical fiber cabling in
the data center is common practice. The most common 10 GbE optical
fiber transmission in use in the data center is 10GBASE-SR. This will
support varied distances based on the type of optical fiber cabling
installed. For the OM1 optical fiber (e.g., FDDI grade 62.5/125=B5m
multimode fiber), distance is limited to 28 meters. For laser
optimized OM3 grade 50/125=B5m (500/2000) multimode fiber, the distance
jumps to 300 m with future proof support for 40 and 100 Gb/s currently
under development within IEEE. In order to increase the distances on
OM1 grade optical fiber, two other optical fiber standards have
published. 10GBASELX4 and 10GBASE-LRM increase allowable distances to
300 m, and 220 m respectively. However it is important to note that
LX4 and LRM electronics are more expensive than their SR counterparts,
and in most cases, it is less expensive to upgrade your optical fiber
cabling to laser optimized (OM3) grade optical fiber as a cabling
upgrade would not result in elevated maintenance costs due to the
higher cost of the electronics.

10 Gb/S Infrastructure Options Progression from 1Gb/S to 10 Gb/S

In many cases for both optical fiber and balanced twisted-pair
cabling, an upgrade from 1 Gb/s to 10 Gb/s will require a change of
the Ethernet switch, as older switch fabrics will not support multiple
10 Gb/s ports. Prior to selecting balanced twisted-pair or optical
fiber for an upgrade to 10 GbE, a study should be completed to ensure
that power, cooling, and available space for cabling is adequate. This
analysis should also include day one and day two operating and
maintenance costs.

Power consumption for 10 Gb/s switches is currently a major factor in
the cost analysis of balanced twisted-pair vs. optical fiber cabling
in the data center. With first generation 10GBASE-T chips operating at
10-17 Watts per port, lower power consumption is a goal and a
challenge for 10GBASE-T PHY manufacturers. This is certainly something
to watch as next generation chips are expected to have much lower
power demands on par with Infiniband ports or roughly one half of the
first iterations. The same was seen in gigabit Ethernet, which from
first generation chips to current technologies, saw a 94% decrease in
power from 6 Watts per port to the 0.4 Watts per port figure we see
today. Supporting this is the recent release of a 5.5 W per port
10GBASE-T chip from Aquantia6.

It is further noted that IEEE is working on Energy Efficient Ethernet
(802.3az) technology that will allow links to autonegotiate down to
lower speeds during periods of inactivity - a capability which could
reduce power by an estimated 85% when negotiating from 10 Gb/s to 1 Gb/
s, and even further for lower speeds. Average power per 24-hour period
will be far less when Energy Efficient Ethernet is built into future
generation 10GBASE-T chips. This potential power savings is not
available for optical fiber as there is no ability to autonegotiate
over optical fiber.

Since optical fiber electronics cannot autonegotiate, a move from
1000BASE-xx to 10GBASE-xx requires a hardware change. In contrast,
both 1GbE and 10GbE can be supported by 10GBASE-T balanced twisted-
pair compatible equipment. Hardware changes cause downtime and a
shortened lifecycle of the network hardware investment. There are
several options for optical fiber communications at 10GbE. Each is
characterized by range, wavelength and type of optical fiber media.
The following table shows an estimated end-to-end cost comparison
between various balanced twisted-pair and optical fiber data center
applications including estimated 3 year maintenance contract costs.

http://www.siemon.com/us/white_papers/08-07-10-copper-fiber-options-data-ce=
nter.asp?ec=3Dprcvf


Ergyn Sadiku

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