SOURCE: BLADE Network Technologies
|
April 23, 2008 08:00 ET
BLADE Network Technologies Introduces RackSwitch -- Industry's First Ethernet Switches for Rack-Level Network Virtualization
BLADE's "Virtual, Cooler and Easier" Switches Overcome Network Overload Through "Rackonomics" -- Revolutionary Approach for Scaling Out Data Center Networks to Drive Down Total Cost of Ownership
SANTA CLARA, CA--(Marketwire - April 23, 2008) - BLADE Network Technologies, Inc., the
industry leader in network virtualization for servers and storage,
announced its new RackSwitch family of Gigabit and 10 Gigabit Ethernet
switches, the industry's first Ethernet switches for rack-level network
virtualization.
BLADE's new 1U RackSwitch product family extends virtualization by
mirroring the benefits of server virtualization within the network at the
rack level, saves energy through rack-friendly cooling and alleviates
management pain by removing complexity through simplified management and
fabric convergence.
Priced at under $500 per 10 Gigabit Ethernet port, BLADE's RackSwitch
products take a breakthrough approach that is becoming known as
"Rackonomics" to reduce the total cost of ownership of data center
infrastructures, overcome network overload and enable scale-out data center
economies. For the first time, data center architects can standardize on a
unified and affordable rack-level network infrastructure to provision and
scale-out Web 2.0 environments, high-performance clusters and virtualized
data centers.
"A perfect storm of factors -- among them server and storage
virtualization, I/O-intensive Web 2.0 applications and the move to data
center consolidation using blade servers, multi-core CPUs and converged I/O
fabrics -- is overloading data center networks," said Vikram Mehta,
President and CEO, BLADE Network Technologies. "Weathering this overload
requires a revolutionary new set of customer-driven rules for the data
center that is becoming known as 'Rackonomics.' IT departments can leverage
Rackonomics to scale-out their data center networks affordably at the rack
level. This comes as a welcome alternative to vendor-driven approaches that
require them to scale up using inefficient, power-hungry and disjointed
network topologies provisioned with large core switches that are far more
expensive to deploy and operate. BLADE's RackSwitch is inspired by
Rackonomics for data center networking that is 'Virtual, Cooler and Easier'
so that IT departments can contain total cost of ownership, deliver greater
return on investment and increase business flexibility."
To bring its new line of rack-level switches to market, BLADE is leveraging
its market-leading position as the number-one supplier of Ethernet switches
for blade servers. BLADE has more than four million ports installed,
connecting more than 800,000 HP, IBM and NEC server blades, delivering its
products across 26 market segments including large data center networks
equipped with thousands of switches. BLADE's experience with networking
optimized for servers and storage validated the need for rack-friendly
switches that simplify IT management requirements and equip today's
I/O-intensive data centers with network virtualization.
"Rack-level Ethernet switching is important to accommodate data center
network loads generated by consolidation and virtualization," said Joe
Skorupa, Research Vice President at Gartner. "With servers now being
utilized at capacities of up to 80 to 90 percent, server virtualization can
saturate your aggregation network. And servers equipped with multiple
adapters for networking and clustering require more space and generate more
heat. These factors combine to call for a unified approach to network
virtualization at the rack level."
"Mantara's technology solution has been designed from the ground up to meet
the challenge of exploding market data rates, real time distribution of
market data and speed of execution for the demanding securities industry,"
said Brice Hamon, Chief Technology Officer for Mantara, Inc, a rapidly
growing bond and equity trading firm. "BLADE's RackSwitch provides the
low-latency, high-bandwidth networking that we require to deliver extremely
high-speed data feeds from multiple venues and gives us an affordable
growth path to handle exponentially growing volume in the years ahead."
BLADE's new RackSwitch products with SmartConnect™ and VMReady™
software are uniquely designed to be "Virtual, Cooler and Easier."
RackSwitch is "Virtual" through rack-level network virtualization enabled
by:
-- Network Virtualization: Multiple switches operate as one large virtual
switch, providing networking connections for an entire rack of servers.
Bandwidth, VLANs, security policies and other network parameters can be set
once for an entire rack of servers, regardless of the number or type of
servers.
-- Network Mobility: Allows server blades to be added, removed or
replaced without the need of any address re-assignment -- reducing the
coordination normally required between server and network administrators.
BLADE's new Server Mobility™ capability handles address assignments as
servers move between slots or chassis -- physically or in the case of a
failover to a functioning server blade. This means that client devices will
see no change in relevant network addresses as applications move from one
physical server to another.
-- Virtual Machine Movement: BLADE's new VMReady™ moves networking and
security policies to follow as VMs are added or moved to meet changes in
demand. This removes a major obstacle to enabling VM movement -- allowing
VMs to move without opening security vulnerabilities.
RackSwitch is "Cooler" through server and storage rack-friendly cooling
with benefits that include:
-- Server Rack-Friendly Airflow: Most network switches are designed with
airflow opposite to server airflow, which generates "hot loops" that
increase cooling requirements. BLADE's RackSwitch products are designed
with server rack friendly front-to-back airflow that allows for cool aisles
and hot aisles, while keeping all cabling in the back.
-- Low-Power Green Networking: As the industry's first green networking
products, BLADE's RackSwitch products consume just six watts per 10 GE port
compared with 20 watts per 10 GE port for conventional chassis-based
switches.
-- Rack-level intelligence: Network virtualization distributed to rack
level networks lowers CapEx and OpEx, reduces power, cooling and space
requirements and enables pay-as-you-grow distributed switching versus
conventional centralized networking infrastructures that are more expensive
to provision and require an overhaul and rebuild of the data center
network.
RackSwitch is "Easier" through simplified management and fabric convergence
with benefits that include:
-- Server Administrator-Friendly Networking: Easy-to-use, web-based
configuration interface designed for server administrators. Server
administrators can easily provision I/O for an entire rack, and
independently provide server, storage and I/O capacity. They can also
detect failures instantly so corrective action can take place
immediately -- without requiring intervention from network operations
teams. Unified management with BladeHarmony™ Manager provides a
comprehensive replicated data center view of I/O, single-click updates to
thousands of switches and integrate with HP Systems Insight Manager and IBM
Director.
-- Lossless FCoE Storage Area Networks: The RackSwitch G8100 is the first
Ethernet switch to deliver the "loss-less" I/O required to carry Fibre
Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) storage traffic across Ethernet networks based
on the emerging standards for Converged Enhanced Ethernet™ (CEE). CEE is
an enhanced version of Ethernet for data centers which adds flow control
and congestion notification across multiple lanes of high-performance data
and storage traffic on a single, unified Ethernet fabric.
-- Rock-solid Ethernet switches: Each RackSwitch has a non-blocking
internal switching fabric and a complete suite of switching features,
proven in the networks of half the Fortune 500 companies and matured over
5+ years of network deployments.
-- Improved Cabling: RackSwitch G8100 supports Active CX-4 technology
which extends cable lengths to 100m with thinner cables. Patent-pending,
recessed CX-4 connector design provides better cable management and airflow
within the rack.
BLADE's RackSwitch G8100, a 1U top-of-rack switch equipped with 24
lossless, low-latency 10 Gigabit Ethernet (10 GE) ports, is designed for
emerging high-volume 10 GE application environments, high-performance
clusters that require latency of 300 nanoseconds or less and/or as a 10 GE
aggregation switch. BLADE's RackSwitch G8000, a 1U top-of-rack switch
equipped with 48 Gigabit Ethernet ports and four 10 Gigabit Ethernet ports
for uplinks and/or stacking, is designed for rack-level server
connectivity, Web 2.0 cloud clusters and/or as a Gigabit aggregation
switch.
Pricing and Availability
BLADE's new RackSwitch products are available in June 2008. The RackSwitch
G8000 is priced starting at $5,495. The RackSwitch G8100 is priced starting
at $11,950 -- under $500 per 10 Gigabit Ethernet port.
BLADE will debut its new RackSwitch family of Gigabit and 10 Gigabit
Ethernet switches at Interop Las Vegas, April 27 - May 2. Also at Interop,
BLADE President and CEO Vikram Mehta will join the "Storage and Networking
in a Virtual World" panel on Tuesday, April 29 at 11:30 a.m. Visit BLADE at
Interop Las Vegas Booth #1659.
About BLADE Network Technologies
BLADE Network Technologies is a market-leading supplier of Gigabit and 10G
Ethernet network infrastructure solutions that reside in blade servers and
"scale-out" server and storage racks. The company's customers include half
of the Fortune 500 companies across 26 industry segments. BLADE boasts an
installed base of over 170,000 network switches representing more than four
million switch ports. For more information, visit www.bladenetwork.net.
BladeHarmony, SmartConnect, VMReady and Server Mobility are trademarks of
BLADE Network Technologies. Converged Enhanced Ethernet™ is a trademark
of International Business Machines Corporation in the US and other
countries. All other names are or may be trademarks of their respective
owners.