Common Electrical I/O

The Common Electrical I/O (CEI) refers to a series of influential Interoperability Agreements (IAs) that have been published by the Optical Internetworking Forum (OIF). CEI defines the electrical and jitter requirements for 3.125, 6, 11, 25-28, and 56 Gbps electrical interfaces.

CEI, the Common Electrical I/O

The Common Electrical I/O (CEI) Interoperability Agreement published by the OIF defines the electrical and jitter requirements for 3.125, 6, 11, 25-28, and 56 Gbps SerDes interfaces. This CEI specification has defined SerDes interfaces for the industry since 2004, and it has been highly influential. The development of electrical interfaces at the OIF began with SPI-3 in 2000, and the first differential interface was published in 2003. The seventh generation electrical interface, CEI-56G, defines five reaches of 56 Gb/s interfaces. The OIF began work on its eighth generation with its CEI-112G project.[1] CEI has influenced or has been adopted or adapted in many other serial interface standards by many different standards organizations over its long lifetime. SerDes interfaces have been developed based on CEI for most ASIC and FPGA products.

CEI direct predecessors

Throughout the 2000's, the OIF produced an important series of interfaces that influenced the development of multiple generations of devices. Beginning with the donation of the PL-3 interface by PMC-Sierra in 2000, the OIF produced the System Packet Interface (SPI) family of packet interfaces. SPI-3 and SPI-4.2 defined two generations of devices before they were supplanted by the closely related Interlaken standard in the SPI-5 generation in 2006.

The OIF also defined the SerDes Framer Interface (SFI) family of specifications in parallel with SPI. As a part of the SPI-5 and SFI-5 development, a common electrical interface was developed termed SxI-5. SxI-5 abstracted the electrical I/O interface away from the individual SPI and SFI documents. This abstraction laid the groundwork for the highly successful CEI family of Interoperability Agreements and was incorporated in the original release of CEI 1.0 a generation later.

Generations of OIF Electrical Interfaces


Gen.

IA
clause

Pub.
as

Max
per pair

Typical
appli
-cation

Year
pub.

Adopted,
adapted or
influenced

Num.
ranges

Modu-
lations
8 CEI-112G Presumably CEI 5.0 116 Gb/s 800GE? (started in 2016)
7 CEI-56G Presumably CEI 4.0 58 Gb/s 400GE IEEE 802.3bs and 802.3cd working groups 5
6 CEI-28G CEI 3.0,[2] 3.1 [3] 28 Gb/s (25 for LR) 100GE 2008, 2011 InfiniBand EDR, 32GFC, SATA 3.2, IEEE 802.3 100GBASE-KR4 and 100GBASE-CR4, CAUI4, SAS-4, Interlaken 1.9 4 NRZ
5 CEI-11G CEI 2.0 11 Gb/s OC-768, 100GE, 40GE 2008 InfiniBand QDR, 10GBASE-KR, 10GFC, 16GFC, SAS-3, RapidIO v3, Interlaken 3 NRZ
4 CEI-6G CEI 1.0 6 Gb/s OC-768 (~40 Gb/s) 2004 4GFC, 8GFC, InfiniBand DDR, SATA 3.0, SAS-2, RapidIO v2, HyperTransport 3.1, Interlaken 2 NRZ
3 SxI-5 SxI-5 [4] and CEI 1.0 3.125 Gb/s OC-192, 10GE 2002, 2004 Interlaken, SPI-5, SFI-5, FC 2G, InfiniBand SDR, XAUI, 10GBASE-KX4, 10GBASE-CX4, SATA 2.0, SAS-1, RapidIO v1 1 NRZ
2 SPI-4.2 SPI-4, 4.2 [5] 800 Mb/s OC-48 (2.488 Gb/s) 2001-2 HyperTransport 1.03 1 NRZ
1 SPI-3 SPI-3 100 Mb/s (single ended) OC-12 (622 Mb/s) 2000 (From PMC-Sierra's PL-3) 1 NRZ

Two earlier generations in this development path were defined by some of the same individuals at the ATM Forum in 1994 and 1995. These specifications were called UTOPIA Level 1 and 2. These operated at 25 Mb/s and 50 Mb/s per wire single ended and were used in OC-3 (155 Mb/s) applications.[6] PL-3 was a packet extension of the cells carried by those earlier interfaces.

Public demonstrations

Compliant implementations to the draft CEI-56G IAs were demonstrated in the OIF booth at the Optical Fiber Conference in 2015, 2016 and 2017.[7]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.