Intel Corporation today disclosed several significant features for the
company's next-generation communications platform, codenamed "Crystal
Forest." Building upon Intel's strong presence in communications
infrastructure, the platform will handle data processing across the
network more efficiently and securely, while addressing the specialized
needs for handling cloud connectivity and content processing.
Each minute of the day, 30 hours of video are uploaded across the
network, and by 2015 it is estimated to take 5 years to watch all the
video crossing IP networks each second. As these numbers continue to
climb, the burden will be on equipment manufacturers and service
providers to deliver platform solutions that can cost-effectively manage
rapidly increasing traffic without compromising performance and
security.
Currently, equipment manufacturers must combine a variety of highly
specialized silicon co-processors with different software programming
models to handle multiple communications workloads when building
platforms for a scalable network - a very complex and expensive
endeavor. With Crystal Forest, equipment manufacturers will be able to
consolidate three communications workloads - application, control and
packet processing - on multi-core Intel architecture processors to
deliver better performance and accelerate time to market. They can also
develop a scalable product line based on multiple Intel processor
options to plan for future performance increases.
"The demand for increased network performance will continue to grow as
more smart devices connect to the Internet every day," said Rose
Schooler, general manager of Intel's Communications Infrastructure
Division. "And with the popularity of social networking and other
high-bandwidth services, such as video and photo uploads/downloads,
interactive video, crowdcasting and online gaming, service providers
will be challenged to efficiently provision sufficient upstream capacity
and manage the spike in network traffic."
Intel's next-generation communications platform, Crystal Forest, is
expected to deliver up to 160 million packets per second performance for
Layer 3 packet forwarding, making it possible to send thousands of
high-definition videos across each network node. Previously, only ASIC
or specialized processors were capable of sending more than 100 million
packets per second. The Intel Data Plane Development Kit, a set of
software libraries and algorithms, improves the performance and
throughput of packets on Intel architecture platforms to yield more than
five times the performance over previous generations of Intel
platforms.
Crystal Forest will also utilize Intel QuickAssist technology, which
processes and accelerates specialized packet workloads - cryptography,
compression and deep packet inspection included – on standard Intel
platforms. Using this technology, secure Internet transactions can be
accelerated up to 100 Gbps on the platform to give service providers the
ability to handle many more secure transactions and without the cost of
specialized solutions. The network will also be able to evolve to
provide "always-on" secure Internet connections, as opposed to the
opt-in connections currently used on select applications or for
financial transactions online.
Designed to Grow with the Network
The Crystal Forest platform will enable equipment manufacturers to
design more flexible platforms, from small- to medium-sized business
firewalls to high-end routers. Service providers, too, can save money by
deploying fewer complex platforms, making their network easier to
manage and maintain. The Intel platform roadmap plans to deliver annual
performance refreshes for several years, so equipment manufacturers and
service providers will be able to scale and refresh their designs to
meet future network needs. Additionally, Crystal Forest will use a
common application programming interface and common drivers so that
multiple designs can be implemented in much less time and at much lower
development costs.
Full System Simulation of the Crystal Forest Platform
Developers can accelerate software development, testing and integration
by utilizing a simulation model of the Crystal Forest platform provided
by Wind River Simics. With Simics, users can model any Crystal Forest
target configuration and then run unmodified target software on that
model. Wind River Simics enables developers to do BIOS bring-up,
operating-system optimization and application development more
efficiently.
The new platform is scheduled to be available later in 2012.
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