Cisco Systems Inc.
(Nasdaq: CSCO)
is preparing to release a top-of-rack switch that it's been touting as an Arista Networks Inc.
killer, Light Reading has learned.
The Nexus 3500, which sources say was originally designed by the team now
running Insieme Networks
Inc. , is reportedly a low-latency switch built for cloud networks where
virtual machines get moved around a lot. Both are factors that Arista boasts
about with its own switches.
In fact, Arista is running a demo here showing off its virtual-machine
capabilities. It was the subject of an Arista press release Friday.
The Nexus 3500 reportedly will be based on a Broadcom Corp. (Nasdaq:
BRCM)
Ethernet switching chip -- the Trident II that was announced Monday, according
to one source. But sources say it's also going to include an application-specific integrated
circuit (ASIC) for Layer 3 multicast -- which is necessary for a virtual
machine, after it's been moved, to communicate with the rest of the network.
That ASIC was designed by the team at Insieme, Cisco's spin-in startup run by
the same team that did Cisco's Nuovo and Andiamo spin-ins, sources agree. The
team has been moved off that product and onto the next big thing -- possibly a
super-dense 100Gbit/s switch, as Light Reading reported Friday.
Let's get virtual
That Layer 3 ASIC would be useful for a
technology called virtual extensible LAN (VXLAN), developed by VMware and
partners. VXLAN moves virtual machines via a Layer 3 tunnel (technically, it
encapsulates the packets so that the Layer 3 network can move them around).
Normal virtual-machine movement happens at Layer 2, but VXLAN is more scalable
and can cross network boundaries.
VXLAN, which VMware just started shipping, is one of a few technologies being
proposed for this task. Microsoft has its own version, called NVGRE.
Arista's VMworld demo shows VXLAN hardware virtual endpoints running inside a
switch, one that's part of the 7000 family but hasn't yet been announced, says
Doug Gourlay, Arista's VP of marketing.
The technologies are relatively new, so Arista is trying to grab a leader's
position in supporting them. That's the purpose of this week's demo, which shows
interoperability with some big-name companies including F5 Networks Inc.
(Nasdaq: FFIV),
Palo Alto Networks
Inc. and the Isilon branch of EMC Corp. (NYSE: EMC).
As is often the case, interoperability is important for smaller players like
Arista, because they're up against all-in-one offerings from the bigger names,
such as Cisco and VMware
Inc. (NYSE: VMW).
"This has become a game of stacks. Cisco's got a stack. VMware's got a stack.
Oracle Corp. (Nasdaq:
ORCL)
has a stack. This is how Arista can counter that," says Zeus Kerravala,
principal analyst with ZK Research . It's aligning itself with the right companies --
F5, Palo Alto. That's a Who's Who."
Lowering latency
But getting back to that Nexus thing. The 3000 line is the variety of Nexus that's built specifically for low latency, targeting markets such as financial trading. It's also one of Cisco's first product lines to dabble in the OpenFlow protocol, at least according to one engineer last fall.
Kerravala wouldn't discuss the 3500 specifically, but he did think that an
ASIC-based Nexus 3000 would be a logical next step. Cisco, which tends to be
ASIC-happy, has been using merchant Ethernet chips in the Nexus 3000 series.
Network World uncovered some more details about the 3500 earlier
in August, finding that the switch will have low enough latency to rival
InfiniBand gear. Low latency has made InfiniBand, rather than Ethernet, a
favored data-center fabric protocol.
Gourlay declined to comment on the existence of a potential Arista killer at
Cisco. A Cisco spokeswoman declined comment as well.
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