Optically Connected Memory for Disaggregated Data Centers (2008.10802v1)
Abstract: Recent advances in integrated photonics enable the implementation of reconfigurable, high-bandwidth, and low energy-per-bit interconnects in next-generation data centers. We propose and evaluate an Optically Connected Memory (OCM) architecture that disaggregates the main memory from the computation nodes in data centers. OCM is based on micro-ring resonators (MRRs), and it does not require any modification to the DRAM memory modules. We calculate energy consumption from real photonic devices and integrate them into a system simulator to evaluate performance. Our results show that (1) OCM is capable of interconnecting four DDR4 memory channels to a computing node using two fibers with 1.07 pJ energy-per-bit consumption and (2) OCM performs up to 5.5x faster than a disaggregated memory with 40G PCIe NIC connectors to computing nodes.
- Alexander Gazman (2 papers)
- Maarten Hattink (2 papers)
- Mauricio G. Palma (1 paper)
- Meisam Bahadori (2 papers)
- Ruth Rubio-Noriega (2 papers)
- Lois Orosa (27 papers)
- Madeleine Glick (2 papers)
- Onur Mutlu (279 papers)
- Keren Bergman (16 papers)
- Rodolfo Azevedo (4 papers)
- Jorge Gonzalez (7 papers)