Thursday, October 20, 2005

10 Gigabit switches at heart of Internet exchange

NETWORK WORLD NEWSLETTER: JEFF CARUSO ON HIGH SPEED LANS
10/20/05
Today's focus: 10 Gigabit switches at heart of Internet
exchange

Dear networking.world@gmail.com,

In this issue:

* Foundry switches form backbone of Amsterdam Internet Exchange
* Links related to High Speed LANs
* Featured reader resource
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This newsletter is sponsored by Avocent
Network World Executive Guide: Reviewing Trends and Insights for
SMB Executives

Life is different for IT professionals at small and mid-sized
businesses, which don't have the luxury of hiring legions of
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IETF EFFORT PROMISES FEWER NET FAILURES

Shortcomings in current ways of configuring network devices has
the IETF working to standardize a network configuration protocol
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Today's focus: 10 Gigabit switches at heart of Internet
exchange

By Jeff Caruso

The world's largest public Internet exchange is installing three
10 Gigabit Ethernet switches from Foundry Networks.

The Amsterdam Internet Exchange anticipates peak traffic to
exceed 100G bit/sec by the end of this month; overall volume is
growing 9% per month.

It's the world's largest public peering Internet exchange in
terms of bandwidth, clients and switch ports. The exchange is
independent, interconnecting IP networks from more than 220 ISPs
and carriers through four co-locations in Amsterdam.

The four locations all currently have Foundry BigIron switches
in a double-star topology, Foundry says.

To handle the high volume, the exchange is putting in three
BigIron RX-16 Layer 2/3 switches to form the backbone of the
exchange network. These switches will go in two of the four
locations.

This is the biggest and most powerful of Foundry's switches. It
has a switching capacity of 1.536 terabits per second. Foundry
says the switches will eventually be configured with 64 ports of
10 Gigabit Ethernet to interconnect the edge switches. Some of
the 10 Gigabit ports are even expected to serve as direct
connections to the exchange's members.

The RX-16 was introduced in the spring
<http://www.networkworld.com/nllan9259> along with two smaller
versions, the RX-4 and RX-8. In addition to Internet exchanges,
the switches are aimed at high-performance computing
environments, which have recently been a key Foundry focus.

Their strength is in large network connections packed densely
into a small space. While the Amsterdam network is putting in 64
ports of 10 Gigabit per switch, the switches are capable of
handling up to 192 wire-speed 10 Gigabit Ethernet ports and
2,304 wire-speed Gigabit Ethernet ports in a standard seven-foot
telco rack.

The top 5: Today's most-read stories

1. Cisco finally brings security push to LAN
<http://www.networkworld.com/nllan9030>
2. Skype: Hazardous to network health?
<http://www.networkworld.com/nllan7886nllansalert8033>
3. WiMAX just around the corner
<http://www.networkworld.com/nllan9260>
4. McAfee, Omniquad top anti-spyware test
<http://www.networkworld.com/nllansalert6933>
5. Sourcefire discloses buffer-overflow vulnerability in Snort
<http://www.networkworld.com/nllan9261>

_______________________________________________________________
To contact: Jeff Caruso

Jeff Caruso is managing editor of online news for Network World.
He oversees daily online news posting and newsletter editing,
and writes the NetFlash daily news summary, the High-Speed LANs
newsletter and the Voices of Networking newsletter. Contact him
at <mailto:jcaruso@nww.com>
_______________________________________________________________
This newsletter is sponsored by Avocent
Network World Executive Guide: Reviewing Trends and Insights for
SMB Executives

Life is different for IT professionals at small and mid-sized
businesses, which don't have the luxury of hiring legions of
network experts. Read how network executives are keeping a firm
footing on an ever-shifting product landscape. Learn about
trends and insights surrounding VoIP and VPNs; plus get
commentaries from leading experts on storage strategies for
smaller businesses.
http://www.fattail.com/redir/redirect.asp?CID=117586
_______________________________________________________________
ARCHIVE LINKS

Archive of the High Speed LANs newsletter:
http://www.networkworld.com/newsletters/lans/index.html
LANs/Routers Research Center:
http://www.networkworld.com/topics/lans-routers.html
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Patterns in processes: creating standards across your
infrastructure

Benefit from a lively discussion about configuration management
and automated processes as they relate to the IT organization.
Watch this new Webcast now.
http://www.fattail.com/redir/redirect.asp?CID=117481
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FEATURED READER RESOURCE

Network World New Data Center: Spotlight on Advanced IP

Piecing Together the Next Generation IT Architecture. This 5th
installment in a 6 part series takes a look at at On-demand
services, automated management, and management technologies.
PLUS, see how two IT Execs are plotting their way to an all
IP-world. This NDC issue has it all, click here to read now:

<http://www.networkworld.com/supp/2005/ndc5/>
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