PCI Express over Fiber [video]

(youtube.com)

87 points | by mmastrac 5 days ago ago

28 comments

  • buildbot 2 hours ago ago

    Blog post for people who prefer reading: https://hackaday.com/2026/04/11/implementing-pcie-over-fiber...

    While at a higher level, thunderbolt and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ExpEther can both of course work over fiber too!

    (Q|O)SFP are basically just raw high speed serial interfaces to whatever - you see this a lot in FPGAs, you can use the QSFP interfaces for anything high speed - PCIe, SATA, HDMI…

    • dcrazy 2 hours ago ago

      > Although we can already buy commercial transceiver solutions that allow us to use PCIe devices like GPUs outside of a PC, these use an encapsulating protocol like Thunderbolt rather than straight PCIe.

      > [snip]

      > As explained in the intro, this doesn’t come without a host of compatibility issues, least of all PCIe device detection, side-channel clocking and for PCIe Gen 3 its equalization training feature that falls flat if you try to send it over an SFP link.

      So, uh… what’s the benefit? How much overhead does Thunderbolt really introduce, given it solves these other issues?

      • tnt246 8 minutes ago ago

        I go over it in the video but yes, active thunderbolt is probably a very good choice for a lot of people. I went into another direction for some reasons that are not applicable to everyone:

        - Learning : I want to learn about the lower level of PCIe and it's a good project. - Re-use of cabling : I have a bunch of single mode fiber bundle going around already. You can't find thunderbolt that just have a LC connector ... - Isolation : Active thunderbolt cable still often have copper for some low speed signals, they don't offer true galvanic isolation - Avoid dealing with thunderbolt. I want a custom chassis/pcb at one end and chips to convert from TB back to PCIe are not readily available to make custom stuff with ... (not as an individual anyway).

        So yeah, if you want a ready to use solution, TB cable is absolutely a good choice, here I'm having some fun, learning in the process and hopefully sharing some of the knowledge.

      • jmyeet an hour ago ago

        The benefits are twofold: physical colocation and bandwidth.

        Thunderbolt 5 offers 80Gbps of bidirectional bandwidth. PCIe 5.0 16x offers 1024Gbps of bidirectional bandwidth. This matters.

        TB5 cables can only get so long whereas fiber can go much farther more easily. This means that in a data center type environment, you could virtualize your GPUs and attach them as necessary, putting them in a separate bank (probably on the same rack).

        • dcrazy a minute ago ago

          Active optical (yes!) Thunderbolt cables can be much longer. After all, optical fiber was the original medium for Thunderbolt, back when it was still called alight Peak.

          I couldn’t find any optical TB5 cables, but here’s a 4.5m TB4 one: https://www.owc.com/blog/the-new-superlong-40gb-s-owc-active...

          And if TB3 is enough, Corning makes them in lengths up to 50m: https://www.corning.com/microsites/coc/oem/documents/ocbc/OE...

          As for bandwidth, the medium transition seems to actually limit the author’s capabilities by losing some of the more advanced link-training features that are necessary for the highest-bandwidth PCIe 3 connections, never mind PCIe 5.

        • mikepurvis an hour ago ago

          "same rack" should still be fine for 1m passive TB5 cable though, right?

        • consp an hour ago ago

          > 1024Gbps

          Good luck getting a 1Tbit tranceiver. Anydirectional. Also it's 512Gbitish per direction.

          • throwaway270925 15 minutes ago ago

            Easy, fs.com has 1.6Tbps OSFP for about 570€ - though only up to 1m lenght apparently.

          • za_creature 36 minutes ago ago

            The video is about a 2x1 link, which the author hopes to eventually scale up to 3x4 using 40 gig transceivers. I'd say thunderbolt is probably safe in the near future.

          • jauntywundrkind 15 minutes ago ago

            That's 64Gb per lane across x16 lanes. That sounds not daunting?

            There's already 800Gb transceivers readily available, 1.6 is probably getting preview deploys to some hyperscalers & other early adopters as we speak.

          • jmyeet an hour ago ago

            Bidirectional is a lot like biweekly. Biweekly depending on context means twice a week or once every two weeks and bidirectional can both mean per direction and total of both directions.

            But yes I meant 512Gbps each way, to be clear.

            • fc417fc802 38 minutes ago ago

              I'm only a single datapoint but I've never encountered that usage. My understanding of a bidirectional link is that it meets the same spec in both directions simultaneously. It's important precisely because many links aren't bidirectional, sharing a single physical link between two logical links.

  • mmastrac 2 hours ago ago

    This was a super interesting video to watch. I honestly thought SFP required more setup, but this explains why AliExpress is so ripe with USB3 and HDMI over SFP converters that are dirt cheap.

    • jauntywundrkind 8 minutes ago ago

      It's been amazing having 6 years of fiber optic HDMI & DP monitor connections, that work so so so well. I bought some no name one on Amazon in ~2019 and was flabbergasted it was real & worked.

      Such a huge upgrade from the heavy thick 35 ft HDMI<->dvi cable I've used for so long.

      Literally the only downside is figuring out how to roll it up, which I still haven't figured out how to do well with the 150ft cable I have.

      It was astoundingly cheap too. I think the first one I got was under $60?! No one really knew the segment existed, they just needed to get some sales, I assume. I heard usb3 has been available but they've been bulky & expensive. Where-as the whole fiber optic cable seamlessly integrates the transceiver on mine. I like Cable Matters, they make some fine ones.

  • system2 15 minutes ago ago

    I love the Neon Genesis background, awesome project too.

    • ecshafer 12 minutes ago ago

      The neon genesis background plus this awesome technical breakdown feels so early 2000s.

  • ahepp an hour ago ago

    How does this compare to something like RDMA over Converged Ethernet (RoCE)?

  • fl4regun 2 hours ago ago

    Cool project! PCIe itself I think is likely to end up doing something similar soon, there are provisions in the spec now for optical retimers.

  • russdill 2 hours ago ago

    There's a number of optical modules for TB3 and TB4, might be an easier (but less fun) route as TB3 and TB4 can carry PCIe.

  • whalesalad 2 hours ago ago

    So you're saying I can put a handful of 4090's out in the middle of snowy Michigan with a handful of OM4 cables snaking into my basement to run legit arctic cooling with no noise?

    • throwaway270925 8 minutes ago ago

      Better yet, keep it inside and save big on heating!

    • myself248 an hour ago ago

      No part of Michigan is in the arctic, but sure, outside of mosquito season, that would work.

    • preisschild an hour ago ago

      Might as well put your entire computer outside and use thunderbolt/usb-4 over fiber docks

    • phendrenad2 an hour ago ago

      Watercooling loop light be better, the radiator fins will still rust from condensation.

    • benjojo12 an hour ago ago

      I mean yes, but you could also just place the entire computer out there as well