SWITCHED FABRIC


Example topology of a Fibre Channel switched fabric network

'Switched fabric' is a computer network topology where many devices connect with each other via switches, used in some storage area networks and other high-speed interconnects, including Fibre Channel and InfiniBand.
Switched fabric networks are different from typical hierarchical switched networks (e.g. Ethernet) in that switched fabric networks naturally support redundant paths between multiple devices, forming a mesh network with devices being on the “edges” of the mesh. One of the advantages of this topology is failover, meaning that in case one link breaks or a switch is out of order, datagrams can traverse alternate paths. Another is scalability, meaning that more switches can be added as the number of endpoints increases so the route length (and thus, latency and throughput) can remain constant for point-to-point datagrams.

Contents
Switched fabric in Fibre Channel
Switched fabrics for VME
See also
External links

Switched fabric in Fibre Channel


Main articles: Fibre Channel fabric

In the Fibre Channel 'switched fabric' topology (called 'FC-SW'), devices are connected to each other through a network of Fibre Channel switches. This topology allows the connection of up to the theoretical maximum of 16 million devices, limited only by the available address space (224). Larger fabrics are typically divided into zones to facilitate maintenance. While this topology has the best scalability properties, it is also the most expensive, requiring at least one switch to establish a connection between devices.

Switched fabrics for VME


The specification for VPX from the VME International Trade Association (VITA) workgroup defines implementations for switched fabrics to be run in a VMEbus environment. The new specification for VPX reflects the growing importance of switched fabrics like PCI Express, RapidIO, Infiniband and 10 Gigabit Ethernet in rugged and embedded computing environments.

See also



Fibre Channel point-to-point

Arbitrated loop

Storage area network

Fibre Channel

Network topology

Bus topology

External links



Switched Fabrics and the Military Market

Optical Switching Fabric (Oct 2000)

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