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Even though it filed Chapter 11 and is reportedly looking to sell off huge chunks of its business, Nortel is not giving up the enterprise fight.
The company this week will unveil its next generation large enterprise core/data center aggregation switch. The Virtual Service Platform 9000 is Nortel’s entry into the increasingly crowded core data center switch field, which has seen numerous announcements of late from Nortel’s competitors: Force10, Extreme, Juniper and even 3Com, which is re-entering the battle to provide a lower cost alternative to Cisco during these trying economic times.
Nortel says the VSP 9000 will go up against Cisco’s Nexus 7000, Force10’s ExaScale, Extreme’s BlackDiamond 8900, Brocade’s BigIron RX, Juniper’s EX8216, 3Com’s S12500 and any other switch approaching or exceeding 100Gbps per slot capacity and designed to aggregate hundreds of 10Gbps Ethernet ports.
Nortel’s challenges are significant, however. The company is restructuring under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection from creditors so its future is uncertain. Also, the VSP 9000 won’t ship for another year, while most competitor offerings are already on the market.
“They’ll miss out on the early mover advantage, and their lack of a channel is a challenge,” says Zeus Kerravala, an analyst at the Yankee Group. “But this switch is way ahead of its time in handling virtual environments. Their product strategy is ahead of their corporate strategy.”
Kerravala says a key feature of the VSP 9000 is its support for Nortel’s Split Multi-Link Trunking technology, which is a link aggregation technique in which multiple physical links between two switches and another device – such as a server – are treated as a single high-speed pipe. Traffic loads are balanced across all available links.
This will serve Nortel well in virtualized data centers, Kerravala says, because the switch is already virtualizing a high-speed trunk from multiple, lower speed physical links. Data centers are adopting virtualization at the server, storage, network and application levels to reduce equipment and energy costs, and scale capacity.
The VSP 9000 chassis takes up 1/3 of a data center rack and provides 10 I/O slots for three module types: 24-port 10G Ethernet SFP+, 48-port 1G Ethernet SFP and 48-port 10/100/1000Mbps Ethernet. Ten gigabit Ethernet density is 240 per chassis, or 720 per rack.
The IPv4 forwarding rate is 970Mbps per VSP 9000 system. It is designed to scale up to a 27Tbps switching architecture in a single chassis or over 100Tbps in a quad switch-cluster architecture, Nortel says.
Nortel also says the VSP 9000 is designed to provide a lossless switch fabric in the data center, and will support the emerging Converged Enhanced Ethernet standards for this capability. The switch’s architecture is also designed to support 40G and 100G Ethernet interfaces when they are expected to emerge next year.
In addition to SMLT and Routed SMPT, the VSP 9000 supports Provider Link State Bridging (PLSB), “VRF-Lite,” “IP VPN-Lite,” and Virtual Control Service. PLSB disables Ethernet MAC address flooding and learning and replaces it with a link state routing protocol, Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS), to learn and distribute network information.
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Comments (7)
They always seem to be lateBy Anonymous on May 18, 2009, 6:02 pmI wonder how much they paid Kerravala?
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Do not be too dismissive of Nortel's Data SolutionsBy Anonymous on May 19, 2009, 2:34 amAs someone who is fairly versed in both Cisco and Nortel data solutions, please note that although each have there advantages and disadvantages, Nortel overall has...
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I've always had a lot ofBy Anon on May 19, 2009, 8:37 am I've always had a lot of respect for Nortel's technology in several areas including LAN switching. It is really too bad that companies like Cisco who push mediocre...
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"They always seem to be late"?By Anonymous on May 19, 2009, 8:50 amNortel had the superior Switch Clustering for more than 6 years before Cisco managed to come up with something similar. Nortel has had redundant stacking since...
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good advertizing...By Anonymous on May 20, 2009, 9:07 amnortel... believe it....
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No one gets fired for buying CiscoBy Anonymous on May 20, 2009, 2:19 pmThe truth is Cisco has legions of followers. I work in a mixed vendor environment (Juniper, Cisco, Nortel and Extreme). Finding Nortel qualified people or anyone...
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