Title :
An OC-12 ATM switch adapter chipset
Author :
Luijten, Ronald P.
Author_Institution :
Zurich Res. Lab., IBM Res. Div., Ruschlikon, Switzerland
Abstract :
This paper describes the architecture synthesis and implementation of an OC-12 chipset for ATM switches based on the PRIZMA switch chip. It consists of an ATM receive chip, ATM transmit chip and an ATM switch interface chip, which have been realized in a O.8-micron CMOS technology and run at 800 Mbit/sec. A cost-effective architecture is described based on speeding up the switch port speed over the link speed and cut-through cell processing. As a result, a large inbound cell buffer memory is avoided. The chipset meets switch adapter requirements for a WAN rather than for workstation or PC adapters. One chipset supports OC-12 speed at 16 thousand connections with the full VPi/VCi field, VP and VC switching, policing, OAM flows, performance monitoring, policing and outbound traffic shaping. Various counters per connection are available to support bandwidth management and accounting functions. Inbound and outbound control traffic insertion and extraction to a high-performance microprocessor interface are supported. The realized chipset demonstrates that a cut-through architecture at high speed is feasible and yields a cost-effective implementation. Furthermore, adapter performance is not dependent on software as all data functions are fully performed in hardware. Requirements for a follow-on version of the chipset due to evolving standards and further cost reduction are described
Keywords :
CMOS digital integrated circuits; asynchronous transfer mode; computer network management; electronic switching systems; integrated circuit design; wide area networks; 0.8 micron; 800 Mbit/s; ATM receive chip; ATM switch interface chip; ATM switches; ATM transmit chip; CMOS; OAM flows; OC-12 ATM switch adapter chipset; PRIZMA switch chip; VC switching; VP switching; VPi/VCi field; WAN; accounting function; architecture synthesis; bandwidth management; control traffic; cost-effective architecture; cut-through cell processing; data functions; high-performance microprocessor interface; implementation; link speed; outbound traffic shaping; performance monitoring; policing; switch port speed; Asynchronous transfer mode; Bandwidth; CMOS technology; Counting circuits; Data mining; Monitoring; Switches; Virtual colonoscopy; Wide area networks; Workstations;
Conference_Titel :
ATM Workshop Proceedings, 1998 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Fairfax, VA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4874-5
DOI :
10.1109/ATM.1998.675109