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How we did it

By David Newman, Network World Lab Alliance, Network World
March 01, 2004 12:17 AM ET
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We asked Foundry to supply two switch chassis (priced at $38,000), a management module ($6,500), four 10G Ethernet interfaces ($50,000, plus $5,000 for each of four 1,310-nanometer LR Xenpak transceivers), and two of its new 40-port Gigabit Ethernet blades ($50,000 each, plus $445 each for each of 40 850-nanometer SFP transceivers). Foundry also supplied 850-nanometer SR Xenpak transceivers ($3,500) for interconnecting chassis because of the lower cost of the SR option.

As in earlier reviews, we assessed device performance in terms of pure 10G bit/sec throughput, delay and jitter; 1G bit/sec throughput, delay and jitter across a 10 Gigabit backbone; failover times; and quality-of-service (QoS) enforcement.

Our primary test instrument was the SmartBits performance analysis system from Spirent Communications, equipped with XLW-3721 TeraMetrics 10G Ethernet cards and LAN-3325 TeraMetrics XD 10/100/1000 Ethernet cards. We used Spirent's SAI, SmartFlow, and TeraRouting applications to generate traffic.

For the 10G Ethernet and backbone tests, the test traffic consisted of 64-, 256-, and 1,518-byte Ethernet frames. The duration for all tests was 60 seconds, and the timestamp resolution of the SmartBits was plus or minus 100 nanosec.

In the 10G Ethernet tests, we asked Foundry to assign a different IP subnet to each of four 10G interfaces in one chassis. We configured the SmartBits to offer traffic from 510 virtual hosts per interface in a fully meshed pattern (meaning traffic was destined for all other interfaces). We measured throughput, latency and jitter.

In the backbone tests, we asked vendors to set up two chassis, each equipped with one 10G Ethernet interface and 10 edge interfaces using Gigabit Ethernet. We again asked vendors to assign a different IP subnet to each edge interface and we configured the SmartBits to offer traffic from 510 virtual hosts per interface. This time, we offered traffic in a partially meshed multiple-device pattern; as defined in RFC 2889, that means the traffic we offered to one chassis was destined to all interfaces on the other chassis and vice versa. Once again, the metrics were throughput, latency and jitter.

In the failover tests, we set up two chassis, each equipped with one Gigabit Ethernet and two 10G Ethernet interfaces. We asked vendors to configure Open Shortest Path First metrics to that one 10G Ethernet interface, which would act as a primary route, and one 10G Ethernet interface would function as a secondary.

We offered a single flow of 64-byte frames to one Gigabit Ethernet interface at a rate of 1,000,000 frame/sec; thus, we transmitted one frame every 1 microsec. Approximately 10 seconds into the test, we physically disconnected the primary link, forcing the switch to reroute traffic onto the secondary path. We derived failover time from frame loss. We attempted to repeat the same test with 2 million flows, forcing 1 million to be failed over, but were unable to complete this event because of design issues with the Foundry device.

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