Intel Labs said May 3 that it has come up with a way to reuse and/or reconfigure commodity-type servers and cluster them in such a way as to turn them into data center routers.
Intel researchers, led by Gianluca Iannaccone and Sylvia Ratnasamy, have coined the phrase “router bricks” for the reused servers, which are designed to put servers that may be out of commission — or new units not being used right away — to work in new capacities, thus saving capital expenses for IT departments.
Key to the redeployment of these machines is an open source software package called Click Router, developed at MIT a decade ago, which the Intel researchers have used to tie the servers together for their new roles in the data center.
Router bricks are a high-speed router using off-the-shelf IA [Intel architecture] servers. They are fully programmable [control and data plane], extensible in that they evolve networks via software upgrade, and incrementally scalable at flat cost per bit, Iannaccone told eWEEK.
“These are a first step toward flexible network infrastructure,” Iannaccone said. “We are currently pursuing the application of RB to data centers, where they will help in content delivery, network power management and next-gen Internet routing.”
These create networks that are simpler to use and cheaper to evolve, Iannaccone told eWEEK.
“Programmers can rapidly build and reprogram networks using the hardware and software they’re most familiar with. They [also] can decouple network software and hardware and avoid the cost of specialized hardware development,” Iannaccone said.
The main reason this can be done at this time is the emergence of Intel’s multi-core Nehalem chips, which provide the bandwidth and gigbit speed for these router bricks to perform at enterprise levels, Iannaccone said.
“The router bricks demonstrate that any number of servers can achieve switching speeds of N ??? R bits-per-second, provided each server can process packets at a rate between 2R-3R bps,” Iannaccone said.
“The Nehalem chips have the power to do this. We couldn’t have done this before.”
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Enterprise Networking
“Best Practices for Choosing a WAN Optimization Solution”
May 19, 2010 at 2pm Eastern / 11am Pacific (60 Minutes)
You already know that WAN optimization delivers cost savings, enables new applications and offers a slew of other benefits for distributed organizations. But with so many choices on the market, how do you deploy the right one for you? Are there particular features or capabilities that you should be considering when you put together your short list for a pilot test?
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