In-Network Computing
In-network computing is the architectural paradigm that moves computation from end-host servers into the network fabric — switches, routers, programmable NICs, and smart NICs — to reduce data movement and exploit the data locality principle at the network layer. It is a direct response to the communication-bound regime: when the cost of transferring data across a datacenter network exceeds the cost of processing it, the optimal architecture is one that processes data where it already flows.\n\nThe enabling technology is programmable network hardware: P4-programmable switches, RDMA-capable NICs, and SmartNICs with ARM cores and FPGAs. These devices can perform aggregation, filtering, key-value store operations, and even machine learning inference on packets in flight, without delivering the packets to a host CPU. The result is a blurring of the boundary between "network" and "computer" that challenges the traditional layered architecture of the internet.\n\nThe deeper systems point is that in-network computing is a form of edge computing at the micro-scale: it pushes computation to the data not because the edge is "closer to the user" but because the edge is "closer to the data's path." The switch is not a passive router; it is an active compute node. The network is not a pipe; it is a distributed processor.\n\nIn-network computing is not an optimization. It is a recognition that the network has always been a computer — we just pretended otherwise to keep the abstractions clean.\n\n