Microarchitecture of a high radix router | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Microarchitecture of a high radix router


Abstract:

Evolving semiconductor and circuit technology has greatly increased the pin bandwidth available to a router chip. In the early 90s, routers were limited to 10Gb/s of pin ...Show More

Abstract:

Evolving semiconductor and circuit technology has greatly increased the pin bandwidth available to a router chip. In the early 90s, routers were limited to 10Gb/s of pin bandwidth. Today 1Tb/s is feasible, and we expect 20Tb/s of I/O bandwidth by 2010. A high-radix router that provides many narrow Dalports is more effective in converting pin band-width to reduced latency and reduced cost than the alternative of building a router with a few wide ports. However, increasing the radix (or degree) of a router raises several challenges as internal switches and allocators scale as the square of the radix. This paper addresses these challenges by proposing and evaluating alternative microarchitectures for high radix routers. We show that the use of a hierarchical switch organization with per-virtual-channel buffers in each subswitch enables an area savings of 40% compared to a fully buffered crossbar and a throughput increase of 20-60% compared to a conventional crossbar implementation.
Date of Conference: 04-08 June 2005
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 20 June 2005
Print ISBN:0-7695-2270-X
Print ISSN: 1063-6897
Conference Location: Madison, WI, USA

Contact IEEE to Subscribe

References

References is not available for this document.