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- N-1-2-030.50.2 Gigabits by Craig Partridge*, craig@aland.bbn.com
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- The topic of this quarter's column is interfacing gigabit computers
- and gigabit networks. It is a problem that has to be solved soon and
- is proving surprisingly difficult.
-
- Let's start with the computers. I have recently received the
- preliminary handbook for the DEC "Alpha" chipset. Alpha is a RISC
- chip design that DEC hopes to use well into the 21st century. The
- first version has a 6 nanosecond clock and can do two instructions in
- parallel per cycle - so at peak rates (for a few instructions) the CPU
- will be running at about 300 million instructions per second. The
- current chip has a 128 bit bus with a 10 ns cycle, so at peak speeds,
- the processor is consuming 12.8 gigabits/second from outside the
- processor. (Internally, using on chip cache memory, the processor
- will actually be processing somewhat more data.) While looping in
- code and smart management of caches will limit how data has to come
- from peripheral devices, much of the data has got to come from some
- peripheral, and some of the data is presumably going to come from the
- network the computer is attached to. Another way to think about the
- computer's data requirements is to remember the old rule of thumb
- attributed to Amdahl: one instruction requires a bit of I/O. That
- rule implies the first Alpha processor will need between 150 and 300
- megabits of I/O capacity. Parallel disk systems can provide some of
- that bandwidth, but the network is going to have to provide a lot too.
-
- Attaching computers which process gigabits of data to networks which
- have gigabits of bandwidth creates a computing milieu I like to refer
- to as the "gigabit environment". The term gigabit environment helps
- me remember that both computer and network are capable of and
- interested in handling data at gigabit rates.
-
- Several researchers have already started work on interfacing gigabit
- networks and fast computers. Some of those projects, most notably
- those at Bellcore, the University of Pennsylvania, MIT and DEC Western
- Research Lab, have been looking at interfacing gigabit networks to
- workstations. I'd like to introduce you to some of the problems these
- teams are discovering because chips like the DEC Alpha and the faster
- SPARC chips coming out this year will eventually appear in
- workstations and those workstations will appear on our desktops. Thus
- the gigabit network to workstation connection has the potential to be
- a key problem in the late 1990s.
-
- One problem that context switching in RISC processors tends to be
- relatively expensive, measured in hundreds of instructions. So if a
- packet arrives for an application which is not currently running, it
- may take hundreds of instruction cycles to get the process running so
- it can accept the packet. That's a lot of instructions, particularly
- when it may take only a few hundred instructions to do all the
- protocol processing on the packet. Jeff Mogul of DEC has suggested
- that to avoid this problem, it may make sense in some cases to have
- applications busy wait for packets.
-
- Another problem is memory hierarchies. In part because fast memory is
- very expensive, many workstations have several layers of memory
- hierarchies. (Indeed, these memory hierarchies are one reason that
- context switching is so expensive.) Getting data to or from a network
- interface requires moving data between the bottom of the memory
- hierarchy (the interface) and the top of the memory hierarchy (the
- processor) and moving that data can take a long time. David
- Tennenhouse of MIT has suggested that to avoid these memory-related
- delays, it make make sense to make network interfaces which act like
- co-processors, and attach the network interface to the co-processor
- pins on the CPU chip! Current trends are to get rid of co-processor
- pins because pins space is tight, but Tennenhouse's observation that
- we need to look at fast paths from network to CPU is important.
-
- Finally, folks are running into unnecessary bottlenecks in workstation
- designs. For example, the University of Pennsylvania team reports
- that while the IBM RS/6000 has a fast bus and a fast processor, the
- I/O controller at the head of the bus is quite slow, making it
- difficult to use the full power of Pennsylvania's prototype high-speed
- network interface.
-
- For more on this work, I suggest you look at Mogul and Borg's paper in
- Proc. ACM ASPLOS, and the papers on ATM host interfaces in Proc. ACM
- SIGCOMM '91.
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- * Research Scientist, BBN, and Editor-in-Chief, IEEE Network Magazine
-