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Optical Circuit Switches

Oslo_Norway_092720A
[Oslo, Norway]

- Overview

An Optical Circuit Switch (OCS) is a networking device that routes data by physically steering beams of light from one fiber to another, without converting the signal into electricity. By bypassing power-hungry Optical-Electrical-Optical (OEO) conversions, OCS eliminates critical bandwidth bottlenecks, yielding massive savings in energy, latency, and cost for hyperscale AI data centers. 

1. How OCS Works: 

Unlike traditional electrical packet switches that read, process, and forward individual data packets, an OCS acts as a dynamic, software-controlled patch panel. 

  • Beam Steering: When ports need to communicate, an internal controller adjusts an array of micro-mirrors - usually utilizing Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) or liquid crystal technology.
  • Physical Path: This aligns the mirrors to create an end-to-end, dedicated physical light path between computing nodes (like GPUs). 
  • Protocol Agnosticism: Because the switch only handles light, it does not care about the speed or protocol of the data. It can route 1G to 800G+ signals transparently, eliminating the need to upgrade switches when upgrading transceivers.


2. Why OCS is Crucial for AI: 

Modern AI training and inferencing clusters require massive, interconnected groups of GPUs. OCS has become a foundational technology in data centers operated by companies like Google and other hyperscalers to scale these clusters effectively. 

  • Ultra-Low Latency: Data travels at the speed of light through the fiber with no queuing, buffering, or processing delays. 
  • Massive Power Savings: By removing the need for electrical switching fabrics and Digital Signal Processors (DSP), an OCS consumes up to 20% to 40% less power than traditional electrical equipment. 
  • Dynamic Reconfiguration: OCS platforms can reconfigure network topologies on the fly to adapt to different AI workloads and job schedules without the need for manual cable management.

 

 <More to come ..>

 

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