Network Switching Costs II: The 55% Tax (B)racket

In a previous post, we looked at trends of cost per port for data center network switching.  Now, everyone is focused on cost per switch port but nobody seems to be paying much attention to the fact that every port requires a transceiver and a cable (whether optics or direct-attach copper).

Let’s look at your run-of-the-mill data center deployment to wire up three thousand odd servers at 10 gig. Pick your poison, but basically the transceiver-cabling tax % overhead stays the same, independent of the vendor.

Network Switching Costs

Server Access Ports (10GE) 3072
Access Uplink Ports 1024
Total Access Ports 4096
Interconnect Ports (to Aggregation & Core switches) 2560
Access ASP/Port $280
Interconnect ASP/Port $700
Access Switches ASP $1,146,880
Interconnect Switches ASP $1,792,000
Total ASP Switches (1) $2,938,880
Server Access DAC Cables 3072
Interconnect Transceivers 3584
DAC ASP (3 meter) $60
Fiber Transceiver ASP (SR) $400
Server Access DAC Cables ASP $184,320
Interconnect Transceivers ASP $1,433,600
Total Cables+Transceivers (2) $1,617,920
Cable + Transceivers Overhead as % of ASP Switches Cost(3=2/1*100) 55%
TOTAL $4,556,800

Welcome to the 55% vendor tax.

And, where else might you have expected to pay an average effective tax rate of 55%?

In the Soviet Union. In 1990.

(page 33: http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/1996/06/pdf/cheasty.pdf)

Glasnost? Niet. Support for apparatchik transceivers only.

Surely, you say, a lot of R&D investment has gone into these gizmos to justify their price? Nope, all made by the Avagos, Finisars, Opnexts et al. of the world.

And your vendor can publish thousands of RFC’s and other protocol alphabet soup in their datasheets but not a list of compatible (=the ones that they will support) transceivers??

So if you would like to see at least one of your favorite vendors sing and dance the kalinka, be sure to request the cheaper USR transceivers* for the 100m runs so common in today’s data centers :-)

*: A discussion on USR transceivers at Greg Ferro’s blog.