I guess let’s not confuse two things.  The optical network is made up of the 
photonic portion and then the transponder/muxponder portion.   A single term 
like “DWDM” can be confusing since it can refer to both.   It will take a long 
time (maybe never) to remove the photonic switching part of the network.  
However, it’s always been cheap to deploy because optical vendors tended to 
subsidize that network using sales of the other portion, the transponders, 
which you buy more and more over time.  Those photonic components are expensive.

On the DWDM signal portion, I’m not talking about 100ZR compared to 100G on a 
transponder or DWDM line system.  100ZR has had to deal with the power 
limitations of QSFP28 ports, which QDD/OSFP do not suffer from.  There are 
quite a few QDD pluggables in production today capable of supporting 100G 
signals over 1000s of km or 400G near 1500km.  Now that’s not what you can get 
out of some external transponders, so those will still have their place in high 
performance applications.   When you move to 800G, 1.2Tbps single channel they 
also have their own distance limitations.  So it really depends on the 
application and the network.

Phil

From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+bedard.phil=gmail....@nanog.org> on behalf of Mark 
Tinka <mark@tinka.africa>
Date: Friday, May 5, 2023 at 12:55 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Re: Routed optical networks

On 5/4/23 19:32, Phil Bedard wrote:

It’s my personal opinion we aren’t to the days yet of where we can simply build 
an all packet network with no photonic switching that carries all services, but 
eventually (random # of years) it gets there for many networks.  There are also 
always going to be high performance applications for transponders where 
pluggable optics aren’t a good fit.

I think every time the IP space gets close to running an all-packet network, 
the Transport folk come out with an easier way to do it, that it's too hard to 
ignore.

Based on that, I think they will always be one step ahead, with the key 
advantage being reliability of capacity over the distance, for the cost.

The farther your fibre has to run, the costlier it gets to do it without DWDM.

I mean, it's only now that 100G-ZR is becoming a reality for packet networks, 
and we are talking thousands of US$ for optics to get us 80km - 120km distance. 
Meanwhile, DWDM vendors can get you 800Gbps per wavelength in the same distance 
(or 30X that distance) far less cheaply.

I get the appeal of not needing DWDM gear to underlay your packet network... 
it's neater and offers fewer points of failure. But unless you are dealing with 
very short distances and can ride a reasonable balance between service features 
and switching/forwarding capacity in your router/switch, it's going to be hard 
to ignore the DWDM gear if you are trying to be a serious operation, at that 
scale, over a wide area.

Mark.

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