Networking giant Cisco Systems has been under attack for the past several
years, and the company gearing up its high-end, converged Nexus switches to
defend its data-center turf from encroachment by HP, Dell, Arista Networks,
Juniper Networks, Brocade Communications, and others.
Picking up the offensive pace and doing better defense is particularly important for Cisco now that the 10GE ramp is accelerating – 10GE ports will soon be standard on servers – and the 40GE ramp is starting. Any transition in networking technology in the data center is always a chance to unseat the incumbent, which is often Cisco.
This time around, Cisco is focusing on the Nexus line of switches, which run the company's NX-OS operating system and which support server and storage traffic over a single backbone. Shashi Kiran, director of marketing for Data Center Solutions at Cisco, tells El Reg that the company has been able to command the lion's share of switching revenue thus far during the 10GE cycle. It is still early, however, and Cisco can't make any assumptions. Hence the bolstering of the Nexus lineup.
Gartner reckons that Cisco's 10GE switching business grew by 255 per cent last year and gave Cisco a commanding 73.8 per cent share of worldwide revenues. HP garnered 17.6 per cent thanks to its acquisition of 3Com, and IBM got 2.4 per cent thanks to its acquisition of Blade Network Technologies. Juniper only pulled in 1.4 per cent of revenues and Brocade only 1.3 per cent, leaving all the other players chasing the remaining 3.4 per cent slice of the pie.
Kiran says that as 2010 was coming to a close, the company had 15,000 customers using its Nexus switches (that number includes the Multilayer Director Switch core switches that run NX-OS as well as the top-of-rack Nexus 2000, 3000, and 5000 switches and the end-of-row, modular Nexus7000 switches). By the end of 2011, Cisco hopes to have added another 4,000 to 5,000 more customers for its Nexus products.
The Nexus 3048 is a Layer 2/3 switch with 176Gb/sec of switching capacity and
a message forwarding rate of 132 million packets per second, enabled in part by
its 9MB shared buffer. In addition to the 48 Gigabit ports, it also has four
10GE uplinks. The Nexus 3048 is shipping now and costs $14,000 for an entry
configuration.
The Nexus 3016 is also a Layer 2/3 switch, sports 1.2Tb/sec of switching
capacity, and can handle 950 million packets per second; hence, it has enough
capacity to drive 16 ports running at 40GE speeds. Customers can use the ports
running at that 40GE speed, or use special cables that break them down into four
10GE ports, which gets you to a total of 64 ports running at 10GE – exactly what
the Nexus 3064 does. If you like this dense and fast 40GE switch, it will cost
you: $65,800 in a base configuration.
The Nexus 7009 chassis has almost as many ports as the larger Nexus 7010
using the new Fabric 2 switch modules – 336 as opposed to 384 – but crams it
into 14 rack units instead of 21. Cisco is mounting the seven line cards in the
Nexus 7009 horizontally and removing a whole lot of what is apparently
extraneous cooling space in the larger Nexus switch chassis. – the Nexus 7009
has side-to-side cooling, which is how it can be packed tighter.
The new F2 Series line card has 48 10GE ports that burn less than 9 watts per
port, and the Fabric 2 switch modules can deliver 550Gb/sec in switching
bandwidth per module, considerably more than the 230Gb/sec in the Fabric 1
modules. You add line cards in the front and switch modules in the rear of the
chassis, which can scale between 5 to 11.5 billion packets per second of message
handling and between 8.8Tb/sec and 18.7Tb/sec of non-blocked switching capacity,
depending on the model, when fully loaded.
The Nexus 7000 module switch chassis
The new Nexus 7009, which has been shipping quietly since August, costs $20,000. The Fabric 2 modules cost $12,000 a pop for the Nexus 7009 and 7010 chassis and $18,000 for the Nexus 7018 enclosure. These Fabric 2 modules are shipping now for the Nexus 7009 chassis and won't ship until November for the two larger modular switches. The Nexus 7000 F2-Series I/O modules will ship in November as well, and cost $44,000 each.
That sounds like a lot of money, but here is how Ram Velaga, vice president of product management for Cisco's Data Center Solutions division, does the competitive math:
How Cisco stacks up the Nexus 7000 against the competition
Those comparisons are for getting 768 ports running at 10GE speeds in a non-blocking manner – Cisco clearly thinks it has a competitive winner.
Cisco made a number of other tweaks as part of the Nexus sweep. One was adding a 32MB buffer to its Nexus 2248TP-E switch so it can handle buffering of bursty traffic, such as video streams, better.
Picking up the offensive pace and doing better defense is particularly important for Cisco now that the 10GE ramp is accelerating – 10GE ports will soon be standard on servers – and the 40GE ramp is starting. Any transition in networking technology in the data center is always a chance to unseat the incumbent, which is often Cisco.
This time around, Cisco is focusing on the Nexus line of switches, which run the company's NX-OS operating system and which support server and storage traffic over a single backbone. Shashi Kiran, director of marketing for Data Center Solutions at Cisco, tells El Reg that the company has been able to command the lion's share of switching revenue thus far during the 10GE cycle. It is still early, however, and Cisco can't make any assumptions. Hence the bolstering of the Nexus lineup.
Gartner reckons that Cisco's 10GE switching business grew by 255 per cent last year and gave Cisco a commanding 73.8 per cent share of worldwide revenues. HP garnered 17.6 per cent thanks to its acquisition of 3Com, and IBM got 2.4 per cent thanks to its acquisition of Blade Network Technologies. Juniper only pulled in 1.4 per cent of revenues and Brocade only 1.3 per cent, leaving all the other players chasing the remaining 3.4 per cent slice of the pie.
Kiran says that as 2010 was coming to a close, the company had 15,000 customers using its Nexus switches (that number includes the Multilayer Director Switch core switches that run NX-OS as well as the top-of-rack Nexus 2000, 3000, and 5000 switches and the end-of-row, modular Nexus7000 switches). By the end of 2011, Cisco hopes to have added another 4,000 to 5,000 more customers for its Nexus products.
The 64-port Nexus 3064 ultra-low latency 10GE switch
that was announced back in March for speed freaks (like the kind that run
hedge fund and risk analysis applications) is getting some company. The Nexus
3048 is a 48-porter that runs at Gigabit Ethernet speeds, while the Nexus 3016
is a 16-porter that will support either 10GE or 40GE speeds.
The Nexus 5000s were updated back in March and were largely left alone this time
around. But as promised a year ago, the Nexus 5500s now support an NX-OS tweak
that enables these top-of-rackers to support FabricPath network-flattening and
traffic optimization software that debuted in June 2010 on the high-end Nexus
7000 switches. Kiran says that Cisco has more than 500 customers using
FabricPath on the Nexus 7000s.
Protecting the data center core
Speaking of the Nexus 7000 modular switches, there's a new entry chassis
coming called the Nexus 7009 that is aimed at smaller data centers and as a core
network for campus networks. Here's how it stacks up against the current Nexus
7010 and 7018 data center switches:
The Nexus 7000 module switch chassis
The new Nexus 7009, which has been shipping quietly since August, costs $20,000. The Fabric 2 modules cost $12,000 a pop for the Nexus 7009 and 7010 chassis and $18,000 for the Nexus 7018 enclosure. These Fabric 2 modules are shipping now for the Nexus 7009 chassis and won't ship until November for the two larger modular switches. The Nexus 7000 F2-Series I/O modules will ship in November as well, and cost $44,000 each.
That sounds like a lot of money, but here is how Ram Velaga, vice president of product management for Cisco's Data Center Solutions division, does the competitive math:
How Cisco stacks up the Nexus 7000 against the competition
Those comparisons are for getting 768 ports running at 10GE speeds in a non-blocking manner – Cisco clearly thinks it has a competitive winner.
Cisco made a number of other tweaks as part of the Nexus sweep. One was adding a 32MB buffer to its Nexus 2248TP-E switch so it can handle buffering of bursty traffic, such as video streams, better.
Another is a promise to make its Adaptive Security
Appliance (ASA) firewall appliance, which is sold as a piece of hardware or a
plug-in module for Catalyst switches and which has sold over 1 million units to
date, available as a virtual appliance. It will be called the ASA 1000V and will
complement the Nexus 1000V virtual switch for ESXi hypervisors (and
soon Hyper-V) and the Virtual Security Gateway, which came out
a year ago as virtual appliance. ®
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