2.8 Chapter Summary


The Storage Architectural Landscape

  • Storage devices now comprise more of the total enterprise IT budget than servers.

  • SANs and NAS provide networked storage options and are complementary.

  • New IP SANs allow geographic freedom through reach of IP networks.

2.1 Storage Building Blocks

  • Basic building blocks include operating systems, file systems, volume management, and storage devices (disks and LUNs).

  • SNIA shared storage model helps outline a variety of storage architectures on a single framework.

  • SNIA shared storage model helps IT professionals plan for corporatewide storage solutions, enabling greater efficiency.

2.2 Internal Storage/Server-based storage

  • Internal storage quickly became a bottleneck in large computing environments and migrated to a variety of external storage.

2.3 External Storage (JBOD, RAID, Tape, Optical, Other)

  • JBODs are just what the name says and require additional functionality in the host or network to be scalable and highly available.

  • RAIDs enhance performance through striping and provide fault tolerance through mirroring and parity checks.

  • Combinations of RAID levels provide mission-critical storage availability to servers and applications.

  • Tape drives and libraries provide lower cost per megabyte than disk, but require more time for backup and retrieval.

  • Optical storage provides cost in between disk and tape with more resilient media than tape.

  • Solid-stage storage is used in niche, high-performance configurations.

2.4 Direct-Attached Storage

  • DAS extends server life by providing additional storage capacity.

  • DAS can offload some server-based storage functions to the device, such as RAID.

  • DAS has high performance but does not scale, offers limited sharing, and can represent a single point of failure.

2.5 Network-Attached Storage

  • NAS delivers networked storage but at the file layer, representing a higher level of abstraction.

  • NAS uses TCP/IP networks for connectivity.

  • NAS works well for file- related applications like corporate file sharing and Web serving, but cannot deliver the performance and scalability for block-oriented applications like databases.

2.6 Storage Area Networks

  • SANs deliver the performance and block access of DAS with the network flexibility of NAS.

  • First-generation SANs were built with Fibre Channel and delivered gigabit performance, additional scalability, resource sharing, and distances to tens of kilometers.

  • Fibre Channel has interoperability between end systems (servers and storage devices), but multivendor switch interoperability is still awkward .

  • Pure IP SANs using iSCSI take advantage of longstanding IP and Ethernet networks.

  • New IP storage adapters combine the best of traditional IP networking cards with Fibre Channel HBAs to deliver TCP/IP offload for high throughput of IP storage.

  • IP SANs deliver unified management, common technology with corporate networks, ability to use trained personnel, and built-in extension to MANs and WANs.

  • IP SANs require multiprotocol capabilities to integrate with existing Fibre Channel infrastructure.

  • IP storage switches and gateways integrate Fibre Channel storage and Fibre Channel SANs with IP networks.

  • IP storage switches and gateways provide conversion capabilities between iSCSI and Fibre Channel for unified, multiprotocol SANs.

2.7 IP SAN Protocols

  • The three IP storage transport protocols are iSCSI, iFCP, and FCIP.

  • iSCSI and iFCP are IP strategies for supplementing or replacing Fibre Channel fabrics with IP and Ethernet infrastructures .

  • FCIP is a Fibre Channel perpetuation strategy to connect Fibre Channel fabrics over distance.

  • Multiple protocols are required because iSCSI makes no provision for Fibre Channel.

  • Fibre Channel-to-Fibre Channel communication is handled by either the iFCP or FCIP protocols.

  • Using iSCSI to link two Fibre Channel systems can result in lost states and poor error recovery.



IP Storage Networking Straight to the Core
IP Storage Networking: Straight to the Core
ISBN: 0321159608
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 108

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