Cliff Grossner, senior research director, data center, cloud and SDN, IHS Markit, in a latest research report said the data center network equipment revenue rose 11 percent in Q2 2016 to $3.1 billion.
Data center network equipment revenue includes data center Ethernet switches, application delivery controllers (ADCs), software-defined enterprise wide area network (SD-WAN) and WAN optimization appliances (WOAs).
The report also predicted that the software-defined enterprise WAN market revenue will be $1.3 billion by 2020 – achieving triple-digit growth of above 90 percent per year through 2020.
Over 12,000 25 gigabit Ethernet (GE) ports shipped in Q2 2016, and triple-digit growth rates are expected out to 2020.
Growth continued in the data center network equipment market in Q2 2016.
“We anticipate a slowdown to 2018 followed by an increase out to 2020 as a broader transition to SD-WAN begins to take hold and data center and Ethernet switch revenue surges due to the growing adoption of 100GE,” said Cliff Grossner.
SD-WAN is gaining ground with service providers and is anticipated to make up 71 percent of WAN optimization revenue in 2020.
Borrowing the software-defined networking (SDN) concepts of abstraction for the data plane with centralized control, SD-WAN delivers improved application performance for a fraction of the cost of traditional Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) links, causing a significant shift in enterprise WAN architecture.
SD-WAN control can be delivered by a cloud service provider (CSP) from an off-premises cloud, transforming the WAN optimization market in light of SDN.
SD-WAN vendors are gaining traction. North American service providers continue to enter the market, including CenturyLink, which is using Versa Networks’ solution, and Verizon, which is partnering with Viptela and Cisco.
“We look for declines in the WAN optimization appliance segment to persist as the data center market transitions to SD-WAN,” Cliff Grossner said.
1GE ports exhibited a 14 percent sequential decrease in Q2 2016, which is in line with the move to higher-speed ports, primarily due to increased virtual machine density on servers and improved server performance — especially now that Intel’s Grantley server silicon is shipping in volume.
Grantley offers many more cores per CPU than previous generations and in aggregate will push much more data per second onto the network.
10GE, 40GE and 100GE port shipments all posted year-over-year growth in Q2, with 40GE and 100GE leading the way.