Juniper bolsters its MX routers with packet processing ASIC 
Tuesday, July 3, 2018 at 11:11AM
Roy Rubenstein in 5G CUPS, Juniper Networks, MX series, Penta, Sally Bament, Universal Chassis, edge routing, packet processing

Juniper Networks has developed its next-generation packet processor, a single-chip package that includes 3D-stacked high-bandwidth memory. The device’s first use will be to enhance three of Juniper’s flagship MX series edge routers. 

The company has also announced software for the 5G cellular standard that separates the control and user planes, known as CUPS, and two new MX-series platforms that will use the company’s universal chassis.

The company’s MX series edge routers were first introduced in 2007. “The MX is a platform that is at the heart of our service provider customers globally, as well as a number of our cloud provider and enterprise customers,” says Sally Bament, Juniper’s vice president of service provider marketing (pictured).       

The latest enhancements will provide the MX edge router customers with another decade of support to meet their evolving service requirements, says Bament.

Source: Gazettabyte, Juniper Networks 

Penta silicon

Juniper’s latest single-chip packet processor has a 500 gigabit-per-second (Gbps) duplex throughput and is implemented using a 16nm CMOS process. This compares to Juniper’s existing 120Gbps duplex 65nm CMOS Trio packet processor that is a four-device chipset that powers the MX platforms and was unveiled in 2009. The single packaged chip with its 3D-stacked memory reduces packaging by 83 per cent compared to the four-chip Trio chipset.           

The Penta is being readied for the advent of 400–gigabit client-side interfaces and features 50Gbps serialiser/ deserialisers (serdes).

Juniper will use the Penta Silicon on its latest MPC10E linecard that has a capacity of 1.5 terabit-per-second (Tbps). The linecard will be used to enhance its MX240, MX480 and MX960 edge routers. The current MPC7E linecard, powered by the Trio, has a 480Gbps capacity.

The MPC10E linecard showing the client interface options and the three Penta ICs. Source: Juniper Networks

The company highlights the Penta programmability, enabling it to accommodate new emerging routing protocols. 

The custom chip is also the first with hardware acceleration for Layer 2 MACsec and Layer 3 IPsec encryption protocols, claims Juniper.

“The benefit [of hardware acceleration] is that you don’t have to trade off encryption with processing performance and scale,” says Bament. “We can terminate thousands of IPSec sessions without any performance impact.”

The Penta also supports the FlexEthernet standard.

 

CUPS

Juniper claims it is the first vendor to implement CUPS, developed by the 3GPP standards body. 

CUPS stands for Control and User Plane Separation of Evolved Packet Core (EPC) nodes. “By decoupling the control and user planes, you can scale them independently,” says Bament.

Such a separation brings several benefits. CUPS can be used to reduce latency by moving user plane nodes closer to the radio access network. Low latency is required to enable emerging network edge applications such as self-driving cars and virtual reality-augmented reality. 

Adding more user plane nodes will also help service providers cope with the continual increase in mobile data traffic. AT&T says data in its mobile network has grown 3,600x since 2007 and it expects a further near-10x growth by 2022.

With CUPS, service providers can combine different vendors’ control plane and user plane solutions in their network. “We can now interoperate with third-party 5G control planes from vendors,” says Bament. Juniper already partners with Affirmed Networks, a virtualised 5G control plane vendor. 

Service providers also have a choice for the user plane itself: they can use physical hardware such as Juniper’s MX platforms or virtualised user plane solutions from third-party vendors, or both solutions in their networks.  

 

Universal chassis

Juniper has also unveiled two additional MX platforms that use its universal chassis announced a year ago. Having a universal chassis simplifies inventory management and operational costs.

The common chassis is already used for Juniper’s PTX packet transport core routers and its QFX switches for the data centres. At the time of the universal chassis launch, Juniper said it would also support MX linecards. 

The two new MX edge routers using the universal platform are the MX10008 and MX10016. The 13 rack unit (13RU) MX10008 has a 19.2-terabit capacity while the 21RU MX10016 doubles it to 38.4 terabits.

 

White boxes

The leading service providers are increasingly promoting the adoption of white boxes yet the Juniper announcement includes all the classical elements of traditional telecom equipment: chassis, line cards and custom silicon. 

“There is certainly a trend towards white-box implementations and certainly customers are buying software from us and putting it on white boxes,” says Bament. “But it is limited; there is still a way to go in terms of broad adoption.”

Bament points to Juniper’s software-based vMX virtual edge routing solution as well as its CUPS software to show that it is pursuing virtual network function solutions as well as enhancing its MX platforms to benefit service providers’ existing investments. 

The two MX platforms will be available in the second half of this year, the Penta ASIC-based MPC10E line card for the MX240, MX480 and MX960 will be available in the first quarter of next year while the CUPS software is due in the first half of 2019.

 

Further information

Juniper Trio white paper, click here

Article originally appeared on Gazettabyte (https://www.gazettabyte.com/).
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