20 de octubre de
2004
"World's longest
native 10Gigabit Ethernet connection established between Japan,
and CERN Switzerland across research networks in United States,
Canada, The Netherlands, and Japan"
October 20, 2004
- 10AM Japan Standard Time -- Engineers in Japan, Canada,
United States, The Netherlands, and CERN Switzerland completed
the world's longest native 10Gigabit Ethernet circuit for
the transmission of data from the Japanese Data Reservoir
project to the CERN research center in Geneva, Switzerland.
The length of this light path is approximately 18,500 km and
spans 17 time zones.
This international
cooperative project pushes the boundaries of global research
and education networking and lays a foundation for a new array
of international research opportunities.
Using 10Gigabit
Ethernet WAN PHY technology a local area network connecting
computers at the University of Tokyo was extended to include
computers at CERN so that they all appeared to be on the same
LAN. The connection from the University of Tokyo to T-LEX
was provided by the WIDE project. From T-LEX, the circuit
was passed to Seattle using a wavelength donated by Tyco Telecommunications
through the IEEAF, and cross connected through facilities
provided by Pacific Northwest Gigapop in Seattle. From Seattle
the circuit was then carried across a dedicated lambda on
the CA*net 4 network to the Chicago StarLight. At StarLight,
the interconnect to SURFnet's Chicago-Amsterdam lambda was
made, taking the connection to NetherLight in Amsterdam. Finally,
between NetherLight and CERN, SURFnet's Amsterdam-Geneva lambda
was used.
The network connection
involved interconnecting optical lambdas across equipment
from a variety of vendors including Foundry Networks, Nortel
Networks and Cisco Systems. This is believed to be the first
demonstration of the interoperation of 10Gigabit Ethernet
WAN PHY and optical SONET/SDH equipment from these vendors.
The 10Gigabit Ethernet
connection will be used by the Data Reservoir/GRAPE-DR project
of the University of Tokyo to test the optimization and transfer
of larger TCP data flows across such a long fat pipe facility.
Such transfers are of particular relevance to the ATLAS experiment
at CERN's future Large Hadron Collider, where the University
of Tokyo is contributing a data analysis center. The data
transfer is achieved between a pair of data-sharing systems
Data Reservoir placed at the University of Tokyo and CERN.
An average transfer rate of 7.57 Gbps was achieved for a single
TCP stream, using standard Ethernet frames, between two high-end
servers equipped with Chelsio T110 10Gigabit Ethernet adapters.
The Data Reservoir
system also achieved a 9 Gbps disk-to-disk data transfer with
9 Xeon servers at each end of the connection. This performance
figure has not been reported before on an intercontinental
disk-to-disk situation.
This networking
experiment complements and supports activities underway in
the Global Lambda Integrated Facility (GLIF). Most of the
participants in this effort are also participants in GLIF.
The demonstrations
were made possible through the support of the following manufacturers,
who have generously contributed their equipment and knowledge:
Foundry Networks, Nortel Networks, Chelsio Communications,
Cisco Systems, Bussan Networks, and Net One Systems.
We acknowledge the
support of: the European Union project ESTA (IST-2001-33182),
CERN OpenLAB, SARA, Global Crossing, Industry Canada, NTT
Communications, Special Coordination Fund for Promoting Science
and Technology, MEXT, Japan, and ITC of the University of
Tokyo.
CANARIE is Canada's
advanced Internet organization, a not-for-profit corporation
that facilitates the development and use of next-generation
research networks and the applications and services that run
on them. By promoting collaboration among key sectors and
by partnering with similar initiatives around the world, CANARIE
stimulates innovation and growth and helps to deliver social,
cultural, and economic benefits to all Canadians.
CANARIE positions
Canada as the global leader in advanced networking, and is
supported by its members, project partners, and the Government
of Canada. CANARIE developed and operates CA*net 4, Canada's
national research and education network. For more information,
visit: http://www.canarie.ca/
CERN is the European
Laboratory for Particle Physics, one of the world's most prestigious
centers for fundamental research. The laboratory is currently
building the Large Hadron Collider. The most ambitious scientific
undertaking the world has yet seen, the LHC will collide tiny
fragments of matter head on to unravel the fundamental laws
of nature. It is due to switch on in 2007 and will be used
to answer some of the most fundamental questions of science
by some 7,000 scientists from universities and laboratories
all around the world. For more information, visit: http://www.cern.ch/
Pacific Northwest
Gigapop is the Northwest's Next Generation Internet, applications
cooperative, testbed, point of presence; home to the Pacific
Wave international peering exchange; and joint steward with
WIDE of the IEEAF trans-Pacific link. PNWGP and Pacific Wave
connect together high-performance international and federal
research networks with universities, research organizations,
and leading edge R&D and new media enterprises throughout
Washington, Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and the Pacific
Rim. For more information, visit: http://www.pnw-gigapop.net/
SURFnet operates
and innovates the national research network, to which over
150 institutions in higher education and research in the Netherlands
are connected. The organization is among the leading research
network operators in the world. SURFnet is responsible for
the realization of GigaPort Next Generation Network, a project
of the Dutch government, trade and industry, educational institutions
and research institutes to strengthen the national knowledge
infrastructure. Research on optical and IP networking and
grids are a prominent part of the project. For more information,
visit: http://www.surfnet.nl/
University of Tokyo,
Data Reservoir /GRAPE-DR Project is a research project funded
by the Special Coordination Fund for Promoting Science and
Technology, MEXT, Japan. The goal of the project is to establish
a global data-sharing system for scientific data and to construct
a very high-speed computing engine for simulation in astronomy,
physics and bio-science.
GRAPE-DR project
will construct 2PFLOPS computing engine and global research
infrastructure that utilize multi-10Gbps networks in 2008.
This experiment is performed by cooperation of the University
of Tokyo and Fujitsu Computer Technologies, LTD. For more
information, visit:
http://data-reservoir.adm.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/
http://grape-dr.adm.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/
Contact: Kei Hiraki hiraki@is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp
WIDE, a research
consortium working on practical research and development of
Internet-related technologies, was launched in 1988. The Project
has made a significant contribution to development of the
Internet by collaborating with many other bodies -- including
133 companies and 11 universities to carry out research in
a wide range of fields, and by operating M.ROOT-SERVERS.NET,
one of the DNS root servers, since 1997.
WIDE Project also
operates T-LEX (http://www.t-lex.net/)
as an effort of stewardship for the IEEAF Pacific link in
Tokyo.
Contact: press@wide.ad.jp
Tel: +81-466-49-3618 (c/o KEIO Research Institute at SFC)
Fax: +81-466-49-3622
The Internet Educational
Equal Access Foundation (IEEAF) is a non-profit organization
whose mission is to obtain donations of telecommunications
capacity and equipment and make them available for use by
the global research and education community. The IEEAF TransPacific
Link is the second 10 Gbps transoceanic link provided by IEEAF
through a five year IRU donated by Tyco Telecom; the first,
the IEEAF TransAtlantic Link, connects New York and Groningen,
The Netherlands, and has been operational since 2002. IEEAF
donations currently span 17 time zones. For more information,
visit: http://www.ieeaf.org/
GLIF is a consortium
of institutions, organizations, consortia and country National
Research Networks who voluntarily share optical networking
resources and expertise for the advancement of scientific
collaboration and discovery, under the leadership of SURFnet
and University of Amsterdam in The Netherlands. For more information,
visit: http://www.glif.is/