학술논문

Harnessing path diversity for laser control in data center optical networks
Document Type
Conference
Source
2017 IEEE Photonics Society Summer Topical Meeting Series (SUM) Photonics Society Summer Topical Meeting Series (SUM), 2017 IEEE. :113-114 Jul, 2017
Subject
Photonics and Electrooptics
Power lasers
Transceivers
Optical fiber networks
Photonics
Servers
Optical devices
Data Center Networks
Optical Networks
Energy Proportionality
Energy Efficiency
Laser Gating
Language
ISSN
2376-8614
Abstract
Optical interconnects are already the dominant technology in large-scale datacenter networks. Unfortunately, the high optical loss of many optical components, coupled with the low efficiency of laser sources, result in high aggregate power requirements for the thousands of optical transceivers that such networks employ. As optical interconnects stay always on, even during periods of system inactivity, most of this power is wasted. Ideally we would like to turn off the transceivers when a network link is idle (i.e., “power gate” the lasers), and turn them back on right before the next transmission. The danger with this approach is that it may expose the laser turn-on delay and lead to higher network latency. However, data center networks typically employ network topologies with path diversity and facilitate multiple paths for each source-destination pair. Based on this observation, we propose an optical network architecture where redundant paths are turned off when the extra bandwidth they provide is not needed, and they turn back on when traffic increases beyond a high watermark to decongest the network. Maintaining full connectivity removes the laser turn-on latency from the critical path and results in minimal performance degradation, while at the same time power-gating the lasers saves 60% of the laser power on average on a variety of data center traffic scenarios.