DATA CENTER

New Pluggable Form-Factors

Qing Xu

As data centers are built and reimagined to support higher-bandwidth computing, storage and content delivery services, the components used to connect them will also need to changeand edge-mount pluggable modules are a good example.

 

What are Pluggable Modules?

Developed to support telecom and data communications applications, edge-mount pluggable cages on network equipment provide standard interfaces so that pluggable modules can be inserted and adapted. Pluggable modules can be active (consume power) or passive (do not consume power), and the transmission media can be copper or optical fiber, following industrial networking standards (e.g. Ethernet, Fibre Channel, InfiniBand).

 

10G SFP+ (1 electrical lane) and 40G QSFP+ (6 parallel electrical lanes) pluggable modules have been a great market success for years. The same mechanical form factors (SFP28 and 100G QSFP28) have been adopted to support 25G single lane and 4× 25G parallel lanes.

 

Different physical media can support cost-effective, optimized interconnects for different reaches and data center architecture:

  • Twinax direct-attached copper (-CRx) for intra-rack interconnects, up to 5 m reach
  • Multimode fiber (-SRx) interconnects, up to a few hundred meters reach
  • Singlemode fiber (-PSM, -DRx, -FRx, -LRx) interconnects, up to 10 km reach

Note: 'x' represents the number of electrical parallel lanes in the PMD (physical media dependent) sublayer.

 

New Pluggable Form-Factors & Faster Ethernet Speeds

At 200G and 400G, however, the data transmission technology development (NRZ modulation format) and conventional one-lane SFP and four-lane QSFP form factors can no longer keep pace with imminently high bandwidth requirements.

 

PAM4 modulation format has been adopted for 50G (and beyond) serial electrical and optical links to combat serious signal integrity degradation at higher frequencies.

NRZ vs PAM4 Modulation Graphic 

 

New eight-lane form factors (QSFP-DD and OSFP) have been invented to support 8× 25G and 8× 50G PAM4 signaling to support 200G and 400G ports.

 

QSFP-DD

 

QSFP-DD supports the same faceplate density and is backward compatible with QSFP modules, with a maximum power rating of 14W.

 

OSFP Parallel Data Transmission Image

 

OSFP supports eight-lane parallel data transmission with efficient heat dissipation for a wide range of interconnect applications, including metro data center interconnects, with a maximum power rating of 16W.

 

Smaller-sized, higher-density pluggable form-factors, such as µQSFP and SFP-DD, have been invented to increase switch faceplate I/O density. Cost-optimized form-factors, such as RCx, are available to simplify the pluggable design for high-volume, intra-rack passive copper connectivity.

   

A new form factor—RCx (RC1, RC2, RC4)—has been introduced as a low-cost passive copper connector and cable system, specifically designed for intra-rack connectivity (<3 m) in 25G, 50G and 100G Ethernet. 

 

This new design has several advantages over the most popular SFP and QSFP pluggables for large-volume, intra-rack, server-to-switch interconnects:

  • It supports simple, low-cost, low-power, passive direct-attach copper (DAC) only, without power, re-timers, EEPROMs or I2C interfaces.
  • It requires much less board space for the pluggable cage, simplifying the switch & network adaptor design & cost
  • No need for additional breakout cable design

 

Watch out for future blog posts on related topics including:

  • The evolution of high-speed interface & Ethernet switches
  • Layer 0 copper connectivity
  • Layer 0 fiber connectivity
  • The ubiquity of 100G Ethernet
  • Optical fiber cabling migration toward 100G, 200G, 400G & 800G Ethernet