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Tuesday, June 20, 2006

How Much Industrial Ethernet Uses Fiber?

A recent survey asked what percentage of Industrial Ethernet equipment has at least one fiber port. All of the respondents reported the use of at least some communication over fiber optic cable. About one third claimed less than 25% of their switches had fiber ports. Another third said that between 50-75% of their switches had fiber ports. Roughly one quarter of respondents have greater than 75% of their equipment using fiber ports. And a mere 5% said that 25-49% of their switches had one or more fiber ports. How does your usage compare?

Friday, June 09, 2006

Wire-Speed Industrial Ethernet

When asked if an Industrial Ethernet switch from Contemporary Controls is a wire-speed device, I reply that all of our switches are. But what does wire-speed mean?

Wire-speed operation means that a switching hub port will pass traffic at its specified rate regardless of how much activity may be occurring in the switch as a whole. A repeating hub cannot achieve wire-speed because it cannot provide the simultaneous data exchanges that occur within a switch.

To achieve wire-speed, the internal fabric of a switch must be capable of processing data at a rate no less than the specified data rate multiplied by the number of ports in the switch. For example, if a 100 Mbps switch has eight ports, its backplane circuitry must be able to process data at a rate of at least 800 Mbps. Some manufacturers imply this but state it in another way, claiming (for example) that their 12-port 100 Mbps switch has a 1.2 Gbps capability (12 ports x 100 Mbps per port).

Vendors typically claim their switches can sustain layer-2 wire-speed forwarding without frame loss. To properly comply with wire-speed switching, address lookup should be done while the IP packet is moved from the input port to the output port without buffering. To confirm that a switch is operating at true wire-speed, elaborate throughput testing is required. Typical tests disable features that transcend basic layer-2 functionality such as throughput limits, flood limits and VLAN port tagging.

Regardless of wire-speed assurances, switch performance in practical situations can depend less on data throughput and more on such features as QoS, IGMP snooping or VLANs. The need for true wire-speed operation is seldom an issue in building automation or industrial settings and is mainly of concern in applications that require intense packet-switching such as video security systems.

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