Skip to main content

Researchers discover alternative to data center routers with hard-coded internals

Data Center Servers
Wikimedia Commons / Global Access Point
Data center traffic management is a big deal. Everything you’ve ever looked up on your phone has routed through a data center somewhere, through a massive version of a home router – the one you have to unplug, and plug back in every couple days.

Big data centers don’t have that luxury. When traffic gets backed up, a lot of bad things can happen. Data gets lost, requests time out, and work doesn’t get done. Because speed is even more important at a data center than it is for a home router, the algorithms that determine how traffic is handled are all hard-wired into the routers themselves.

Recommended Videos

But MIT researchers have proposed a new kind of router that could provide faster networks, and more adaptable traffic management for data centers.

“There are a lot of problems in computer networking we’ve never been able to solve at the speed that traffic actually flows through the network, because there wasn’t support directly in the network devices to analyze the traffic or act on the traffic as it arrives,” said Jennifer Rexford, a professor of computer science at Princeton speaking with MIT News.

.

These massive routers need to be fast, operating at speeds that put the fastest home Wi-Fi to shame, but they also need to be adaptable. These two aspects were previously irreconcilable, to be fast routers needed their control algorithms hard-wired, but to be adaptable they need to be programmable. Currently, when a new and improved control algorithm comes out, network engineers have to wait for new hardware to try it out in their data centers. They can’t just run a patch and update to the new version.

But researchers at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) might have a way around those problems. Two papers unveiled this week detail methods which could allow network engineers to program data center routers without slowing down network traffic.

The first author listed on both papers, Anirudh Sivaraman, is an MIT grad student in electrical engineering, and his approach is a novel one. In the papers, he proposes a new router chip architecture which would allow for programmability, without sacrificing speed by keeping things simple.

Instead of building out a complex algorithm that can identify every type of network traffic and prioritize accordingly, Sivaraman’s approach relies on using simple circuit elements to perform basic operations in complex ways.

For instance, one circuit allows engineers to track running sums, while another performs packet scheduling, allowing engineers to change the way the circuit handles data on the fly – in response to real-time network conditions.

It might not seem like much, but by allowing even small changes to be made at the circuit level on data center routers, traffic management becomes much more adaptable. Which means better performance for data networks and faster speeds for the end user.

“What’s exciting about both of these works is that they really point to next-generation switch hardware that will be much, much more capable – and more importantly, more programmable, so that we can really change how the network functions without having to replace the equipment inside the network,” Rexford added.

Jayce Wagner
Former Digital Trends Contributor
A staff writer for the Computing section, Jayce covers a little bit of everything -- hardware, gaming, and occasionally VR.
Nvidia may have found a new way to bypass GPU export restrictions
The RTX 4090 graphics card sitting on a table with a dark green background.

Chinese gamers are expected to have limited access to Nvidia's best graphics card due to strict export restrictions. However, Nvidia may have found a way around it without cutting down its flagship GPU. A new leak suggests that the RTX 5090D will have the same hardware specifications as the worldwide version, and the solution lies in firmware adjustments.

As a quick refresher, the "D" in RTX 5090D stands for "Dragon." It marks GPUs made by Nvidia to bypass the export restrictions imposed by the U.S. on China, which limit the sale of high-performance graphics processors. We first saw it appear in the RTX 4090D as a remedy for the fact that the base RTX 4090 exceeds the performance thresholds set by these regulations.

Read more
There’s a new way to use ChatGPT on your iPhone. Here’s how it works
Someone holding the iPhone 16 Pro with its display on.

There is a new way to access ChatGPT on Apple's iPhone and iPad. As reported by MacRumors, the latest version of the ChatGPT app makes it even easier to access the app's SearchGPT feature.

ChatGPT, a sophisticated AI chatbot developed by OpenAI, utilizes an ever-growing dataset to answer questions, write stories, summarize factual topics, translate languages, and create creative content. It is available on Apple devices through the ChatGPT app, and it is expected to be integrated into Siri in a future version of Apple Intelligence.

Read more
Give your loved ones the gift of online privacy this holiday season with DeleteMe
DeleteMe visual with computer

Did you know, that at any given time, everything you’re doing while online is being tracked, collected, and collated? Data aggregation companies called data brokers take all the information they collect about you, your family, and other people, and then sell it for a profit. Outside of the ethical concerns of that process, one major issue is that it leaves you vulnerable. That information can be easily exposed, purchased, or acquired by nefarious actors. It might then be used to send you loads of spam emails, robocalls, and phishing attempts, and may even contribute to identity theft attacks. Scary stuff. But there are services, like DeleteMe, that help you recover, remove, and take back control of your online privacy and data.

Thanks to a Black Friday and holiday deal you can protect yourself and anyone you care about, for less. DeleteMe is currently 25% off and it would make the perfect gift for your loved ones this holiday season. Why? Because the reality is that everyone's data is being collected and this service can help remove that information, keep it from being reuploaded to databases and offer extra layers of protection against phishing, identity theft, scams, and more. They deserve privacy and security just like you, and you can be the one to gift it to them.

Read more