Cisco Cisco DWDM Transceiver Modules 백서

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© 2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public Information. 
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White Paper 
Cisco Support for IEEE 802.3 25- and 50-Gbps 
Ethernet Group 
Over the last two decades, Cisco has made significant contributions to networking 
industry standards. As an active member of more than 70 world standards bodies and 
forums, Cisco recognizes that our customers and the industry as a whole achieve 
greater success through standards that are developed with contributions from 
partners, customers, and competitors working together. 
Data Center Trends Influencing the Need for 25- and 50-Gbps Speeds 
Cisco’s contributions in the IEEE standards body have helped create numerous Ethernet link-speed standards, 
ranging from Fast Ethernet (100 Mbps) to 100-Gbps Ethernet. These standards have provided an incremental 
transition path to meet the increasing bandwidth demands as technology has evolved. Today, 1- and 10-Gbps 
Ethernet speeds are the predominant interface speeds for server access in the data center. However, as server 
performance continues to increase, the number of workloads per virtualized server is also increasing, placing 
higher demands on server-access connectivity. These demands are especially apparent in highly virtualized server 
farms and cloud environments running scale-out elastic applications through containers; in such environments, 
top-of-rack (ToR) server connectivity is pushing the limits of 10 Gigabit Ethernet bandwidth. Currently, 40 Gbps is 
the next higher standardized link speed; however, large-scale customers with tens and thousands of servers are 
seeking an intermediate Ethernet speed that offers a lower price per gigabit for server connectivity in environments 
in which the full bandwidth of 40-Gbps Ethernet is not required. 
With this goal in mind, the networking industry has rallied around the creation of a 25-Gbps Ethernet standard to 
provide a cost-effective and power-efficient solution for server connectivity. A primary reason for the push for 
25-Gbps Ethernet link speed is that most of the technology for 25-Gbps Ethernet already exists, having been 
defined by the IEEE 100-Gbps Ethernet standard, which is based on four 25-Gbps lanes. This existing technology 
can be repurposed to accelerate time to standardization and time to market for a cost-optimized 25-Gbps Ethernet 
solution that offers an intermediate speed for server connectivity. 
St
andards Activities: Cisco’s Role  
Cisco is leading or actively participating in two efforts underway to standardize and bring 25 Gigabit Ethernet to 
market: 
● 
In July 2014, IEEE approved the formation of the 
 to explore the 
opportunities and needs for a single-lane 25-
Gbps speed for server Ethernet interconnects. Cisco’s Mark 
Nowell is chairing the study group. 
“The application of single-lane 25 Gb/s signaling technologies provide Ethernet with a solution set that can 
be reused by those companies building the data centers of tomorrow. The new study group expects to lay 
the groundwork for a new Media Access Control (MAC) rate that will enable cost-optimized single-lane 
solut
ions that will increase network deployment efficiency,” said Mark Nowell, chair of the IEEE 802.3 25 
Gb/s Ethernet Study Group and senior director, Cisco.