MACsec is moving to the module in scale-across networks.
Media Access Control security (MACsec) is a foundational technology for protecting data in motion. It encrypts and authenticates Ethernet traffic to guard against eavesdropping, denial-of-service attacks, intrusion and other security threats while also strengthening overall data integrity. Embodied in silicon, MACsec further establishes a robust root of trust for managing encryption keys and securing the boot process.
What’s changing is where the silicon for delivering MACsec gets located.
To date, the MACsec circuitry for long-distance scale-across networks has typically been embedded in the switch ASIC, where space and silicon real estate are at an absolute premium. Embedding MACsec into the tight confines of the ASIC raises the cost of integrating the technology. It also makes infrastructure less flexible: some upgrades require taking the system offline, reducing overall capacity.
Alternatively, MACsec devices can be placed on the printed circuit board near the ASIC—think of this as near-packaged MACsec—but this too comes with extra costs and additional complexity. A retimer would likely have to accompany the MACsec device on the board and upgrades can, again, involve taking the system offline.
Integrating MACsec into the coherent DSPs inside ZR/ZR+ modules that make up data center interconnect (DCI) fabrics, by contrast, reduces cost, time and risk. MACsec can be added to the coherent DSPs without changing the external physical footprint of ZR/ZR+ modules or adding components to the module. Just as important, installing, upgrading and managing modules is far easier than replacing switch ASICs or dedicated security devices on a circuit board: ZR/ZR+ modules are specifically designed to be replaced at will.
Marvell has already announced several industry firsts to enable MACsec to scale across networks:
Marvell is collaborating with partners to ensure switches, routers and ZR/ZR+ DCI modules from other developers incorporating Marvell® coherent DSPs are compatible with module-based MACsec.
Joseph Chon, Senior Director of Product Marketing for Data Center Interconnects, discusses the 2nm Libra and 2nm Electra optical DSPs with integrated MACsec and describes how standards-based pluggables will deliver scalable, terabit-scale connectivity for AI clusters.
Scale-across networking is in the middle of a historic shift away from traditional embedded systems for long-distance optics to modules. Modules can reduce the CapEx and OpEx of scale-across networks by up to 75%.1 Module bandwidth, efficiency, and reach, meanwhile, have been increasing at a predictable and fast pace. Supply chain flexibility, enabled by the growth of an ecosystem around pluggable coherent optical modules, has also reduced potential roadblocks to rapid scalability.
By 2030, pluggables will account for approximately 85% of scale-across ports shipped, 80% of bandwidth and 70% of revenue of the coherent market.2
Integrating MACsec accelerates this momentum by expanding the capabilities of coherent pluggable modules and empowering hyperscalers to enhance the resilience and security of their infrastructure.
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Tags: AI infrastructure, Optical Interconnect, Optical DSPs, DSP, data center interconnect, AI
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