PacketWay (pktway)




Charter



Status: Concluded August, 1999 







Chair(s):







 Danny Cohen 







Description of Working Group:



Due to dramatic increases in circuits speed the traditional system



buses are limited in length (e.g., PCI is limited to 8") and cannot



provide the traditional system-wide support. Therefore, the system-wide



connectivity is provided by a high performance networks operating in



very close quarters, having the generic name System Area Networks



(SANs).







Many vendors today use such SANs inside computer platforms to connect



processors to IO devices, processors to memory, and processors to



processors. Most existing SANs are proprietary, and don't interoperate



with each other, not unsimilar to the early stages of LAN development.







In order to be able to interconnect Massively Parallel Processing



systems (MPPs) and to interconnect workstations into MPP-like clusters



there is a need to unify the SANs and to provide means for



interoperability among them.







PktWay is designed to provide a uniform interface for a wide variety of



SANs, such that the higher levels (such as IP) would be able to use



SANs in a uniform manner. An IP driver for PktWay would be able to use



PktWay between heterogeneous processors as if they were all on a single



SAN.







PktWay would be designed to provide interoperability among closely



located heterogeneous processors at high speed. Pktway will sacrifice



scalability and some generality for high performance. Hence, PktWay



will supplement IP for high performance and for fine granularity of



processors.







802.1, the link level control protocol is above LANs, such as the



various Ethernets, FDDI, and Token Ring, at Level-2, and below IP, at



Level-3.







Similarly, PktWay will be above the various SANs (such as RACEway and



Paragon) and below IP.







PktWay will define separately:







        * End-to-End protocol (and packet format)







        * Router-to-Router protocol (and packet format)







        * Resource discovery and allocation











The members of the PktWay Working Group will design, specify, document,



propose, implement, and evaluate the above three protocols that define



the PktWay operation.







The members of the working group will also produce reference software



for PktWay.







Based on initial reactions it is expected that the working group will



include members from academia, government, and industry, covering the



software, hardware, and communication aspects of PktWay.







INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY







All the work that has been performed until now on PktWay is in the



public domain. The PktWay Working Group will only handle public domain



information. All the members of the PktWay Working Group will be 



notified that the working group cannot guard any trade secrets, nor 



limit the distribution of any proprietary information presented to it.