Boost Data-Center Performance While Lowering Cost And Power Consumption

Jan. 11, 2008
The latest accelerated Ethernet adapters from NetEffect extend the company’s network interface card family. The first, the NE0201Gb 1-Gbit/s adapter, plugs right into existing slots and immediately improves the performance of all data-center applications

The latest accelerated Ethernet adapters from NetEffect extend the company’s network interface card family. The first, the NE0201Gb 1-Gbit/s adapter, plugs right into existing slots and immediately improves the performance of all data-center applications without requiring changes to existing network infrastructures or the applications themselves.

The NE0201Gb also is a low-risk stepping stone for enterprises planning a migration to 10-Gbit/s networks. It supports a broad range of industry-standard application programming interfaces (APIs) and protocols requiring no modification, re-compilation, or porting for existing applications. And, its latency is less than 8 µm. It comes in both dual- and quad-port configurations. Prices start at $795, with quantity discounts available.

The 10-Gbit/s NE020BCH accelerated Ethernet mezzanine adapter supports IBM’s BladeCenter H system. With this new, compact form-factor design (CFFh), BladeCenter H administrators can meet the performance demands of a blade server environment while making room for multiple expansion cards on a single blade, maximizing I/O network connectivity. Prices for the NE020BCH begin at $895 with volume discounts possible.

Both adapters use NetEffect’s patented Virtual Pipelined Architecture, which features a pipelined data-flow engine instead of a state machine and implements the IETF iWARP extensions to Ethernet. The iWARP standard uses the remote direct memory address (RDMA) protocol, which minimizes CPU usage and memory bottlenecks usually associated with TCP transfers.

This architecture also produces the lowest power consumption of any adapter of this class with less than 4 W per port. Other advantages include a latency of less than 6 µs, greater than 18-Gbit/s bi-directional bandwidth, higher server utilization, and virtualization support. And, only one adapter is needed to support networking, clustering, and storage.

NetEffect

www.neteffect.com

About the Author

Lou Frenzel | Technical Contributing Editor

Lou Frenzel is a Contributing Technology Editor for Electronic Design Magazine where he writes articles and the blog Communique and other online material on the wireless, networking, and communications sectors.  Lou interviews executives and engineers, attends conferences, and researches multiple areas. Lou has been writing in some capacity for ED since 2000.  

Lou has 25+ years experience in the electronics industry as an engineer and manager. He has held VP level positions with Heathkit, McGraw Hill, and has 9 years of college teaching experience. Lou holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Houston and a master’s degree from the University of Maryland.  He is author of 28 books on computer and electronic subjects and lives in Bulverde, TX with his wife Joan. His website is www.loufrenzel.com

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