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Colliding with reality
By Scott Bradner
Did someone skip a
decade somewhere? I thought that the Ethernet vs. token ring wars were finished
a very long time ago and Ethernet won hands down. If that is the case why are
we seeing so much of the hype over high-speed token ring presented in ways that
seem to be echoes of contests long ago fought and forgotten?
There has been a spate
of articles in this and other publications that explain in varying amounts of
detail how token ring is superior to Ethernet. The most commonly mentioned
differences are the relatively small maximum frame sizes for Ethernet, the
built-in support in token ring for link-level traffic prioritization and the
ability for token ring networks to have multiple simultaneous paths between
switches when switched Ethernet environments can only have one. Less frequently
mentioned these days but showing up from time to time are the claims that
Ethernet collapses under high load and is less predictable than token ring.
There are problems with
most of these arguments. Strings of large sized packets are quite rare, and
simple delayed-interrupt tricks in the interface cards can deal with most
performance issues. Most corporate network designs do not have multiple paths
between switches and even fewer will as level-3 switches continue to get
deployed. The disputable claims that Ethernet collapses or is less predictable
than token ring do not apply in the increasingly common full duplex switched
Ethernet networks. The link-level prioritization is interesting but the
Ethernet people are also working on that.
But my problem is not
that the claims are false or irrelevant but that they are context free. They
are presented in a way that implies that network designers should seriously
consider moving their Ethernet networks to token ring. It is very silly indeed
to imagine that much of that will happen. The disparity in cost between
Ethernet and token ring is just too great. 4/16 Mb token ring PC interfaces are
more than 6 times as expensive as 100 Mb full-duplex Ethernet interfaces. Token
ring switches are 4 times the per port cost of 100 Mb full-duplex Ethernet
switches. Ethernet is vastly outselling token ring. I do not have the actual
numbers but in a data communications catalog I got yesterday there were 53
pages of Ethernet products and one third of a page that had some token ring
products. If you think that the token-ring-is-better argument is relevant,
check out the local video store to see how many Betamax tapes they have.
Don't get me wrong. I
think the development of fast and gigabit token ring is a fine thing. Those
sites, and there are quite a few, that currently use token ring will benefit
greatly from devices that could provide them an upgrade path. I just think that
those who are touting the wonderfulness of the prospects should be a bit more
realistic in describing just who should be paying attention. To do otherwise,
as a co-worker once said, is to do data-free analysis and the result is a
collision with reality.
disclaimer: Harvard
people collide with reality often and occasionally emerge winners but the above
expresses my own frustration.