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November
5, 2004
Fujitsu Donates 10 Gigabit Ethernet Switch For
Research On Next-Generation Networks At UC San Diego
By Doug Ramsey
Researchers at
the University of California, San Diego will use advanced communications
equipment donated by Fujitsu Laboratories of America to link
two experimental optical networks. The Sunnyvale, CA-based company
is the U.S.-based research arm of Fujitsu Limited, a leading
provider of customer-focused information technology and communications
solutions for the global marketplace.
The
donation of an 8-port, 10 Gigabit Ethernet switch Fujitsu XG800
(with 8 LR XENPAK modules) is valued at $80,000. The equipment
will be deployed in the Concurrent Systems Architecture Group
of Computer Science and Engineering professor Andrew Chien.
We are grateful for Fujitsus support which will enable a wide
range of exciting research opportunities in new and ongoing
research projects involving networking, grids, and robust, secure
distributed systems, said Chien, who holds the Science Applications
International Corp. (SAIC) Chair in UCSDs Jacobs School of Engineering.
Fujitsu's single-chip switch is an innovative, leading-edge
design and is an important piece of our leading-edge optical
network environment at UCSD.
Fujitsu has a keen
interest in the development of tomorrows information processing
and networking technologies, said Akira Hattori, Senior Vice
President at Fujitsu Laboratories of America, Inc. We are impressed
with the range of research projects that will benefit from using
our XG800 switch.
The Fujitsu switch
will be used by researchers associated with several networking
projects on campus, including two already funded by the National
Science Foundation: FWGrid, a $1.8 million grant to outfit UCSDs
new Computer Science and Engineering building with an experimental
Fast Wired and Wireless Grid to explore large compute (teraflops)
and data (tens of terabytes) capabilities of state-of-the-art
technologies; and the $13.5 million OptIPuter, which is designing
a revolutionary new architecture for distributed cyberinfrastructure
to support data-intensive scientific research and collaboration.
Both of these projects
will benefit from the ultra high bandwidth that the Fujitsu
switch provides, said Larry Smarr, director of the California
Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology
[Cal-(IT)] and principal investigator on the OptIPuter project.
The equipment will link FWGrid to other OptIPuter locations,
and move us quickly into the fast-growing, 10Gb switched lambdas
fieldhelping researchers to explore massive amounts of scientific
and biomedical data interactively. Lambdas are individual wavelengths
of light that can transmit data through optical fiber, according
to Smarr, who holds the Harry E. Gruber Chair in Computer Science
and Information Technologies in the Jacobs School.
The Fujitsu XG800 switch
bridges the FWGrid and OptIPuter resources in the CSE building.
FWGrids 192 processors deployed in 96 HP ProLiant DL145 systems
will connect to several OptIPuter clusters in the same building
with a total of 42 compute nodes. The XG800 will transmit data
via one or several 10Gb links to the rest of the OptIPuter network
at UCSD, including one storage cluster with 48 nodes, six visualization
clusters with 49 nodes, and five compute clusters with 313 nodes.
A typical data object
distributed within this infrastructure e.g., detailed imaging
of Earth topography, or brain scans can easily scale up to gigabytes
of size. To interact with that data in real time requires high-speed,
predictable clear channel networks. A recent test of the Fujitsu
switch involving 10 pairs of simultaneously 1 Gigabit per second
(Gbps) communication demonstrated that the switch is sustaining
9.4Gbps simplex (one direction at a time) on two ports.
About Cal-(IT)
The California Institute for Telecommunications and Information
Technology [Cal-(IT)] is one of four institutes funded through
the California Institutes for Science and Innovation initiative.
Created in late 2000 by the State of California, the institutes
aim to ensure that the state maintain its leadership in cutting-edge
technologies. Cal-(IT) is a collaboration between the University
of California, San Diego, and the University of California,
Irvine. Its mission is to extend the reach of the current information
infrastructure throughout the physical worldenabling anywhere/anytime
access to the Internet. More than 200 faculty members from the
two campuses are collaborating on interdisciplinary projects,
with support from more than 55 industry partners. www.calit2.net
About Fujitsu
Laboratories of America, Inc.
Fujitsu Laboratories of America, Inc., the U.S.-based research
arm of Fujitsu Limited, focuses on advanced research in Internet-based
technologies, pervasive computing, LSI technologies, interconnect
technologies, computer aided design tools for next generation
VLSI circuits, and photonics technology. Fujitsu Laboratories
conducts research in an open environment and collaborates on
projects with leading academic research institutions and other
research groups, participating in technical conferences to promote
the free exchange of ideas. As part of Fujitsu's global R&D
network, Fujitsu Laboratories of America is dedicated to advancing
the frontiers of information technology through collaborations
with leading researchers throughout the world. For further information,
please visit http://www.fla.fujitsu.com/.
Media Contact: Doug
Ramsey, (858) 822-5825
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