Traffic across IP networks continues to grow, and networks continue to evolve to manage new traffic patterns and demands. This has always been the case, and the industry has a long history of developing new standards through various organizations, such as the IEEE and ITU, and through multi-source agreement (MSA) groups. These standards enable component suppliers, equipment manufacturers, and service providers to interconnect and link networks together as seamlessly as possible. The latest MSA, QSFP-DD800, lays the foundation for 800G Ethernet pluggable optics.
Over the past few years, the industry has been focused on 400GE standards. For 400GE applications, there is a host of new MSAs, and the IEEE has developed a new Media Access Control (MAC), as well as optical and electrical interfaces. Last year, there were many announcements from network equipment suppliers about their next-generation switches and routers with expanded capacity and 400GE port capability. As these next-gen systems begin deployment, industry standards organizations and MSA groups are starting to look ahead at the next step in speeds.
Last September, the formation of the QSFP-DD800 MSA group was announced. Founded by Broadcom, Cisco, Finisar, Intel, Juniper, Molex, Marvell, and Samtec, the mission was to leverage the cornerstone of high-speed pluggable modules