An Optical Circuit Switch (OCS) is a device that directly routes optical signals without converting them to electrical signals. Unlike traditional switches that handle data packets, an OCS creates a physical, dedicated light path between two points. These are increasingly important in the context of AI scale-up because they offer low latency and high bandwidth, which are crucial for the massive data transfers required for large language models and other AI workloads.
The AI Cluster Environment
An OCS is deployed in data centers, specifically within AI clusters or high-performance computing (HPC) environments. These clusters are composed of thousands of GPUs (Graphics Processing Units) that are interconnected to work together on complex tasks. As AI models grow, the amount of data that needs to be moved between GPUs becomes immense. This is where fiber optics comes in. Fiber optic cables can carry much more data over longer distances with less signal loss than copper. The challenge then becomes how to switch and route these optical signals efficiently.
How an OCS Works: An Analogy
The best way to understand the difference between an OCS and a normal switch is through an analogy.
Because AI training jobs often have stable communication patterns that last for hours or even days, the “tracks” don’t need to be changed frequently. When a change is needed, it is done by a central software system, not by the switch itself. This is a form of Software-Defined Networking (SDN) where the software controller calculates a “circuit schedule” and sends instructions to the OCS to re-align its internal mirrors. This reconfiguration, while slower than a packet-by-packet decision, happens in milliseconds, which is fast enough for the needs of AI clusters.
Feature | Electronic Packet Switch | Optical Circuit Switch (OCS) |
Signal Handling | O-E-O conversion | Direct optical path |
Latency | Higher (due to conversion and processing) | Very low (close to the speed of light) |
Power Consumption | High | Low |
Switching Speed | Milliseconds to microseconds (per packet) | Milliseconds to seconds (for a circuit) |
Use Case | General networking, dynamic traffic | Dedicated, high-bandwidth connections |
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Our Micro-Optic and High-Density Fiber Shuffle
To build a large-scale OCS, you must manage a massive number of fiber connections in a compact and organized way. This is where our products are critical.
The collimated light from our lens connectors is then directed onto the internal MEMS (Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems) mirror matrix. These tiny mirrors are what the OCS uses to physically route the light to the correct output port. By integrating our fiber shuffle and micro-optic technology, we provide a clean, scalable, and high-performance solution that enables the core functionality of a next-generation OCS.
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