Evolving trends in high performance infrastructure

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Evolving trends in high performance infrastructure. Andrew F. Bach Chief Architect FSI – Juniper Networks. Agenda. The Need For High Performance. 5. 4. 1. 2. 3. The challenge. The limitations today . Resulting trends. Impact on Data center Infrastructure. Agenda. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Evolving trends in high performance infrastructure

EVOLVING TRENDS IN HIGH PERFORMANCE INFRASTRUCTUREAndrew F. BachChief Architect FSI – Juniper Networks

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AGENDA

The Need For High Performance1

The challenge2

The limitations today 3

Resulting trends4

Impact on Data center Infrastructure5

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AGENDA

The Need For High Performance1

The challenge2

The limitations 3

A better solution4

Junipers products and next steps5

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TRANSACTIONS BECOME BANDWIDTH DISTRIBUTED TO THE FINANCIAL COMMUNITY (TERABITS/SEC) FROM OPRA SYSTEM

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 20150

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400+ YEARS OF RAPID TECHNOLOGY ADOPTION

And a rich history of technology innovation in markets… First stock ticker to disseminate data (1867)

First telephones on the trading floors (1878)

First electronic ticker display board (1966)

Wireless handheld devices on Trading floors 15 years before ipad invented (1995)

Industry’s first private network offeringglobal connectivity

Industry’s private network exceeds 1TbS

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AGENDA

The Need For Speed1

The challenge2

The limitations 3

A better solution4

Junipers products and next steps 5

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FSS CHALLENGES Regulatory model is driving change

Requirement for long term retention of data Requirement to archive meta data Real time risk management is now required

FSS is evolving to a commodity industry Time to market must be faster Product life time is shorting Margins are reducing driving OPEX reduction

Technology adoption is continuing to accelerating to meet accelerating business needs Fuel the race to the triple crown of technology (0 cost, 0 latency, 0 time to market);

Technology is a strategic weapon Bandwidth demand continues to grow at 30% - 50% per year. Comprehensive management and orchestration of the data center

Fundamental new architectures are required Flat Clos like architectures Tightly coupled datacenter network to the wide area optical network Tightly couple the Networks and the servers - SDN

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A TYPICAL CHALLENGE

Matching engine

CustomerGatewaySymbol routing

risk management

TOR

CORE

TOR

TOR

TOR

TOR

TOR

TOR

TOR CORE

CORE

CORE

Grand Total ≈150.0µS

Trade Plant Size:≈ 100 Servers≈ 1500 Ports

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AGENDA

The Need For Speed1

The challenge2

The limitations today 3

A better solution4

Junipers products and next steps5

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LATENCY REDUCTION TRENDS (TOR)

2008 2010 2011 2012 2013

Ethernet is narrowing the gap to Infiniband; industry tracking to < 450ns in 2013

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SLOWING OF PROCESSOR SPEED

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 450

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

4

4.5

processor speed

processor speed

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THE TRADE OFF AXIS

SCAL

E

RE

LIA

BIL

ITY

FEATURE VELOCITY

LATENCY

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AGENDA

The Need For Speed1

The challenge2

The limitations 3

Resulting trends4

Junipers products and next steps5

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A DIFFERENT APPROACH - DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING

Matching engine

TOR

TOR

TOR

TOR

CORE

CORE

Grand Total ≈100.0µS Reduced by 50µS

Customer

Risk Management embedded in TOR

Symbol routing embedded in

TOR

NIC

NIC

Data pre/post processing

Trade Plant Size:≈ 60 Servers≈ 1000 Ports

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APPLICATIONS EMBEDDED NETWORKING – THE NEW WAY TO REDUCE LATENCY AND COST

The race to zero is ending at about 200 – 500NS for a reasonable switch Need to focus on a different approach

Imbed application snippets into the switching fabric Lower latency Eliminates servers Reduces network ports

Imbed snippets at the control or data plane of the network Application can be embedded in a VM in the switch of into

a FPGA in the data path of the switch

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RETURN OF THE CLOS DATA CENTER FABRICS100% of all

National market da runs on JNPR

90% Allequity order flow

All US markets distribute market data over JNPRData Center 1 LayerCarrier Hotel

CustomerConnections

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DATA CENTER SIMPLIFICATION LOWERCOST AND EASE OF USE

Four architectures for a data center, all the same building blocks Stand alone TOR’s MC-LAG Virtual Chassis Fabric

Solutions range from classic to fabric All share common management support All are SDN enabled and support advanced management tools and scripting

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WAN – FSS BUILDING THEIR OWN PRIVATE CARRIER NETWORKS

Lease a service/cloud Shared service Reduced agility Resiliency tested at failure time Easy solution – no need for a technical staff Good solution for a medium to small firm

Build and operate a private cloud Dedicated service Rapidly adaptable to meet changing requirements Customer defines and validates resiliency, easing regulatory

compliance Needs a small skilled staff Lower cost as third parties profit is removed

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AGENDA

The Need For Speed1

The challenge2

The limitations 3

A better solution4

Impact on the data center infrastructure5

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IMPACT ON COMPUTE AND NETWORK Centralize processing where you can distribute where you must

Processors and network switches and hitting natural limitsTo achieve a high performance infrastructure compute resource

must be distributedOptimize computing in the Server, NIC(FPGA), and network

Switches(VM’s and FPGA’s) – not just one place Drive to Clos fabrics

Heavy East – West TrafficCompounded Bandwidth growth > 20% per yearAll networks become virtual

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BANDWIDTH DEMANDS

Servers will be requiring 40G As CPU cores increase by 2016 server bandwidth will need 40G High end servers will need 100G Servers at 100G will drive the need for network links of 400G and

1T

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IMPACT OF SDN/NFV/ORCHESTRATION

Manages virtual fiber plant Controls the adds/moves/changes from the servers via overlays Increased need to design the cable plant correct and for a longer life

Merging of network, server, and storage teams into one

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THANK YOU!