Patent classifications
H04Q2011/0056
PHOTONIC FABRIC CHIP DEVICE
Apparatuses having a plurality of optical duplex and parallel connector adapters, such as MPO connectors and LC adapters, where some adapters connect to network equipment in a network and others to servers or processing units such as GPUs, incorporate internal photonic circuit with a mesh. The light path of each transmitter and receivers is matched in order to provide proper optical connections from transmitting to receiving fibers, wherein complex arbitrary network topologies can be implemented.
Data center architecture utilizing optical switches
Embodiments of the invention describe flexible (i.e., elastic) data center architectures capable of meeting exascale, while maintaining low latency and using reasonable sizes of electronic packet switches, through the use of optical circuit switches such as optical time, wavelength, waveband and space circuit switching technologies. This flexible architecture enables the reconfigurability of the interconnectivity of servers and storage devices within a data center to respond to the number, size, type and duration of the various applications being requested at any given point in time.
Flat, highly connected optical network for data center switch connectivity
An optical reshuffler system for implementing a flat, highly connected optical network for data center and High-Performance Computing applications includes a first optical reshuffler having a plurality of ports each configured to optically connect to a corresponding switch and having internal connectivity which optically connect each of the plurality of ports internal to the first optical reshuffler such that each port connects to one other port for switch interconnection, wherein the internal connectivity in the first optical reshuffler and ports follow rules by which subtending switches are added to corresponding ports provide a topology for the flat, highly connected optical network.
DATA CENTER PACKET OPTICAL TRANSPORT FAILURE PROTECTION
In response to a connectivity disruption in an underlying optical transport ring supporting a routing and packet switching topology, one or more of optical devices of the optical transport ring are modified to establish connectivity between spine nodes in different data centers to reroute communication between at least a subset of the leaf network devices so as to traverse an inter-spine route via the optical modified optical transport ring. That is, in response to a connectivity disruption in a portion of underlying optical transport ring, one or more optical devices within the optical transport ring are modified such that packets between at least a portion of the leaf devices are rerouted along optical paths between at least two of the spine network devices.
LINK AGGREGATION AND DYNAMIC DISTRIBUTION OF NETWORK TRAFFIC IN A SWITCHING CLOS NETWORK
Systems and methods are described for link aggregation and dynamic distribution of network traffic in a switching Clos network. In one embodiment of the present invention, a spine switch of a Clos network learns a first mapping of a Media Access Control (MAC) address of a client device to a first port of the spine switch and a second mapping of the MAC of the client device to a second port of the spine switch. The spine switch aggregates the first mapping and the second mapping as a link group for MAC address of the client device in a MAC address table and distributes network traffic destined for the MAC address of the client device among members of the link group.
OPTICAL SHUFFLE CABLE, CABLE ASSEMBLY, AND METHODS OF MAKING THE SAME
An optical shuffle cable comprises a first cable section, a second cable section, and an intermediate cable section between the first and second cable sections. The first cable section includes a plurality of optical fibers formed as a plurality of first optical fiber ribbons. The plurality of first optical fiber ribbons are stacked to arrange the plurality of optical fibers of the first cable section in a first array. The second cable section includes a plurality of optical fibers formed as a plurality of second optical fiber ribbons. The plurality of second optical fiber ribbons are stacked to arrange the plurality of optical fibers of the second cable section in a second array. The first and second arrays have respective first and second orientations that are perpendicular to each other such that the plurality of first optical fiber ribbons and the plurality of second optical fiber ribbons are shuffled between the first and second orientations within the intermediate cable section. Related cable assemblies and methods are also disclosed.
Optical Interconnection Modules for High Radix Spine-Leaf Network Scale-Out
An optical interconnection assembly and method for the deployment and scaling of optical networks employing Spine-and-Leaf architecture has Spine multi-fiber optical connectors and Leaf multi-fiber optical connectors. The Spine optical connectors of the interconnection assembly are optically connected to multi-fiber connectors of Spine switches via Spine patch cords. The leaf multi-fiber connectors are optically connected to Leaf multi-fiber connectors of Leaf switches via Leaf patch cords. A plurality of fiber optic cables in said interconnection assembly serves to optically connect every Spine multi-fiber connector to every Leaf multi-fiber connector so that every Spine switch is optically connected to every Leaf switch. The optical interconnection assembly facilitates the deployment of network Spine-and-Leaf interconnections and the ability to scale out the network by using simplified methods described in this disclosure.
OPTOELECTRONIC SWITCH
An L-dimensional optoelectronic switch for transferring an optical signal from an input device to an output device, the optoelectronic switch includes: a plurality of leaf switches, each having a radix R, and arranged in an L-dimensional array, in which each dimension i has a respective size R.sub.i (i=1, 2, . . . , L), each leaf switch having an associated L-tuple of co-ordinates (x.sub.1, . . . , x.sub.L) giving its location with respect to each of the L dimensions; wherein each leaf switch is a member of L sub-arrays, each of the L sub-arrays associated with a different one of the L dimensions, and including: a plurality of R.sub.i leaf switches, whose co-ordinates differ only in respect of the i.sup.t dimension, each leaf switch having C client ports for connecting to an input device or an output device, and F fabric ports for connecting to spine switches; a plurality of S.sub.i spine switches, each having R fabric ports for connecting to the fabric ports of the leaf switches, and wherein, in a given sub-array each leaf switch in the sub-array is connected to each spine switch via an optical active switch.
Scalable switch fabric using optical interconnects
A scalable switch fabric using optical interconnects includes one or more line modules each including fabric interface optics supporting a plurality of optical output signals; an optical interconnect optically connected to each of the one or more line modules via the fabric interface optics; and one or more center stage switches, wherein the optical interconnect is adapted to shuffle the plurality of optical output signals from each of the one or more line modules to the one or more center stage switches. The optical interconnect can include two levels of shuffle to distribute each of the plurality of optical signals from each of the fabric interface optics to the one or more center stage switches.
Optoelectronic switch architectures
The present invention provides an optoelectronic switch for transferring an optical signal from an input device to an output device, the optoelectronic switch including an array of interconnected switch modules, which are interconnected by an interconnecting fabric. The switch modules are arranged in an N-dimensional array, the ith dimension having a size Ri (i=1, 2, . . . , N), each switch module having an associated set of coordinates giving its location with respect to each of the N dimensions. Each switch module is a member of N such sub-arrays Si, each sub-array Si comprising Ri switch modules whose coordinates differ only in respect of their location in the ith dimension, and each of the N sub-arrays being associated with a different dimension.