Telco Data Centers Get a New Look at MWC – SDxCentral

Data center gear has become increasingly important to telcos and mobile operators as they adapt to a more fluid world of virtualization and software. For some of the large equipment vendors, the trend has spurred a new angle of conversation at Mobile World Congress (MWC).

Ericsson, in particular, has used the last couple of MWCs to show off its HDS 8000 rack-scalesystem. Plenty of products get showcased at MWC, but this one stands out for being an IT play, a big box of servers and storage.

The HDS 8000, in turn, is based on Intels Rack-Scale Design (RSD, formerly called Rack-Scale Architecture), a new way of building outthe data center. RSD, meant to provide flexible pools of compute and storage forapplications to consume, is sold in rack form. Rather than buy more servers to beef up compute, or more disk drives to amp up storage, the customer buys the stuff one rack at a time, with the option to vary the ration of compute to storagein each rack.

The point isnt raw capacity. This is a different way to build a data center. Compute and storage are disaggregated from one another and can be scaled independently. Top-of-rack, aggregation, and core switches arent necessary; everything is absorbed into RSDsconfigurable network fabric, which handles connectivity within the rack and outward to other RSD racks. Silicon photonics connect all the storage and compute elements, with networking connections configured as necessary.

Ericssons was the first commercial instantiation of RSD. Dell followed last year by launching the RSD-based DSS 9000, a key product offering of the companys Extreme Scale Infrastructure group.

It all comes down to telcos trying to become more cloud-like, as exemplified by the Telecom Infra Project and the open source Central Office Reimagined as a Data Center (CORD) project.

Network functions virtualization (NFV) provides incentive, as it means controlling lots of servers to run these virtualized network functions running a data center, in essence. But theres another angle that is growing thanks tothe Internet of Things (IoT). As IoT threatens to drown out the other noise at MWC (no small feat), it opens the potential need for mobile edge computing, providing another motivation for carriers to get familiar with cutting-edge data center designs.

The HDS 8000 stands out because Ericsson began showing it at MWC long before the product was commercially available. Early versions appearedas early as 2013, when Ericsson showed a prototype at its MWC stand and described the productas a bunch of cloud servers crammed into one box. The formal launch of the HDS 8000 came in 2015.

Some carriers have taken notice. The HDS 8000 scored a customer win with Telefnica at last years MWC. Then,in June, Ericsson and SK Telecom used the rack-scale system at the heart of a new technology initiative called Software-Defined Telecommunications Infrastructure (SDTI), aimed at creating hardware that can adapt quickly to network performance requirements. The companies developed SDTI with 5G deployments in mind.

Ericsson isnt going in alone with the HDS 8000. Quanta is the manufacturer for the system and will also act as a channel partner to offer it to webscale customers.

Pluribus controls the HDS 8000s switching fabric, and Ericsson also acquired NodePrime for $7 million in April, hoping to apply the companys data center management capabilities to the HDS 8000.

One interesting note is that Ericsson uses customized silicon photonics rather than Intels. Ericsson officials say this is because the precise card it wanted wasnt commercially available when the HDS 8000 launched.

As for Dell, its ESI group will likely show the DSS 9000 at MWC but will also be discussingdata-center architectures at other levels of scale. The company offers a design called the modular data center (MDC), which focuses on an entire data center, and last October, Dell introduced the micro MDC, a smaller data center installation that comes in one to five racks worth of gear. Look for Dell to expand on that idea at MWC.

Photo: Jorge Franganillo on Flickr. CC2.0 license. Photo has been cropped.

Craig Matsumoto is managing editor at SDxCentral.com, responsible for the site's content and for covering news. He is a "veteran" of the SDN scene, having started covering it way back in 2010, and his background in technology journalism goes back to 1994. Craig is based in Silicon Valley. He can be reached at craig@sdxcentral.com.

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