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Ultra Ethernet 1.0 turns commodity Ethernet into an AI back-end fabric

Ultra Ethernet 1.0 turns commodity Ethernet into an AI back-end fabric

A 560-page spec gives Ethernet InfiniBand-class RDMA and congestion control; the 2026 work item is Programmable Congestion Management

AI· active Le glissement silencieux·Le jeu long ·9 takes · ·rbtfl upd 24 juin 2026

Summary

The Ultra Ethernet Consortium (UEC) shipped Specification 1.0, a 560-page, vertically integrated stack across NICs, switches, optics and cables, giving commodity Ethernet the features that made InfiniBand the AI back-end default: native RDMA, advanced flow control, path diversity, congestion awareness and ultra-low tail latency, while keeping standard Ethernet optics and tooling. It is the scale-out complement to UALink's scale-up fabric, and the cost-led alternative to Nvidia's InfiniBand for million-GPU clusters. The headline 2026 work item is Programmable Congestion Management, code a congestion-control algorithm once in a standard language and run it on any UE-compliant NIC, decoupling the fabric's most contested layer from any single vendor.

By the numbers

  • 560+, pages in the UEC 1.0 specification.
  • 2026, first PCM (Programmable Congestion Management) work item.
  • 5, stack layers covered (NICs, switches, optics, cables, transport).
  • 1.0, current spec generation, released ahead of 2026 refinements.

Why it matters

InfiniBand's lock on AI back-end networks is Nvidia's quietest moat. An open Ethernet stack with RDMA-class performance lets hyperscalers wire million-GPU clusters on multi-vendor gear at commodity-optics prices, shifting where the networking margin sits and giving Broadcom, Cisco and Arista a credible AI-fabric pitch.

What to watch

  • Programmable Congestion Management landing in shipping NICs.
  • UEC-1.0 deployments in named hyperscale clusters vs continued InfiniBand.
  • How UEC scale-out and UALink scale-up divide the fabric stack in practice.