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Storage Networking: Fibre, iSCSI, NAS

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Title: Storage Networking: Fibre, iSCSI, NAS


1
Storage NetworkingFibre, iSCSI, NAS
  • Graeme Holmes
  • Cristie Data Products Ltd

2
Agenda
  • The Need For SAN
  • Storage Technologies
  • Storage Management

3
The Need for SAN
4
The Need for SAN
  • Server consolidation
  • Non-disruptive capacity increase
  • More efficient resource utilisation
  • Reduction in hardware/licencing costs
  • Reduced footprint

5
Current Situation
  • Direct Attached Storage
  • Locally attached disk
  • SCSI protocol
  • Islands of Storage
  • Available storage on server B cannot be utilised
    by server A
  • Limited, disruptive scalability
  • High Management Costs
  • Inflexible

6
DAS - Scalability
  • Limited to the servers predetermined capacity
  • External expansion with SCSI is limited to 15
    devices per channel
  • 12M Distance limitation
  • Expensive, disruptive to scale
  • High management costs
  • Still has over/under utilisation issues

7
Centralised storage - NAS
  • Network Attached Storage
  • Consolidate File Servers
  • No need to buy servers to add capacity
  • File level storage only
  • Databases require block-level storage
  • Storage traffic moves onto LAN
  • Limited scalability
  • Management

8
Centralised Storage - SAN
  • Dedicated Storage Network optimised for I/O block
    transfers
  • Centralised storage management
  • Block level storage
  • File applications
  • Storage traffic off the LAN
  • Flexible and scalable
  • Any server can have access to any available
    storage
  • Non-disruptive scalability

9
SAN Benefits
  • Grows storage independently of servers
  • Centralised high-availability storage reduces
    storage management overhead
  • Scalable - Supports thousands of interconnected
    devices
  • High aggregate bandwidth, multiple paths
  • 2Gig, 4Gig fibre, Gigabit Ethernet
  • Application clustering possible on wider scale
  • Disaster Recovery

10
SAN - Disaster Recovery
  • To assure continued operations, data can be
    mirrored within the
  • same subsystem
  • to adjacent subsystem
  • to a subsystem in a remote location
  • Storage mirrored or replicated
  • Block level transfer

11
Fibre, iSCSI and NAS
12
Fibre Topologies
  • Point-to-point
  • Only two FC devices connected directly together
  • No sharing of media - devices each benefit from
    total link bandwidth

13
Fibre Topologies
  • Arbitrated Loop
  • 127 addresses or 126 devices per loop
  • Blocking, shared media
  • 100MB/sec speed.
  • Lowest cost Fibre protocol

14
Fibre Topologies
  • Switched Fabric
  • Connect millions of devices
  • Non-shared media
  • 200MB/sec between nodes

15
Other Protocols
  • Methods of connecting FC islands
  • FC-IP Fibre Channel over TCP/IP tunnelling
    protocol that encapsulates and transports FC
    frames over TCP/IP
  • iFCP Internet Fibre Channel Protocol allows
    connection of FC devices over TCP/IP at any
    distance

16
Fibre SAN Management
  • Heterogeneous Environments, Shared Storage
  • Management Achieved by
  • Port Zoning at the switch level
  • LUN masking within the storage array.
  • Zones prevent devices outside zone from
    communicating into zone.

17
Benefits of Fibre SAN
  • Massively scaleable
  • High Performance
  • I/O intensive applications
  • Backup
  • Centralises management of storage

18
Considerations
  • High hardware and software costs
  • High implementation costs
  • New skills required
  • Distance limitation for Disaster Recovery

19
iSCSI
  • A serious alternative?

20
iSCSI - What is it?
  • Final specification approved early 2003
  • Encapsulates block-level SCSI commands in a
    TCP/IP frame
  • iSCSI storage NIC connects storage resources over
    Ethernet
  • A method of creating Storage Networks over IP
  • Two key components
  • Initiator an iSCSI driver embedded in the server
  • Target a gateway device that routes data between
    server storage

21
iSCSI
User
IP Network
IP packet
IP packet
iSCSI Initiator Adapter
iSCSI Target Adapter
Storage Device
Server
22
iSCSI Benefits
  • Leverages existing investment in technology and
    skills
  • Relatively low implementation costs
  • Similar speeds to fibre channel
  • 10 Gig Ethernet, 40 Gig announced
  • No distance limitations

23
Considerations
  • Relatively new standard
  • Lower performance than FC
  • Perceived as less secure than fibre channel
  • OK for controlled environments
  • IPSec required for large LAN deployments

24
TCP Off-load Engines
  • iSCSI on standard NICs
  • Uses CPU for TCP iSCSI processing
  • Software iSCSI with TCP offload
  • TCP processing by TOE card
  • Hardware iSCSI
  • TCP iSCSI processing by TOE card

25
Off-load Engines
26
NAS
  • Where does it fit?

27
NAS
  • File-based storage architecture
  • Resources attach directly to LAN
  • NAS Headers
  • NAS device which uses portion of SAN storage
  • File Server, Home Directories, image storage etc
  • File level storage only
  • Databases require block-level storage

28
NAS Advantage
  • Familiar technology
  • Minimal training
  • Relatively low-cost way of adding disk space
  • Provides some flexibility
  • Additional units can be easily added

29
Fibre or iSCSI?
  • Performance vs Cost
  • High performance requirements for business
    applications
  • Implement FC iSCSI
  • Existing FC SAN costly to expand
  • Use iSCSI storage to cater for non-intensive
    applications, migrate from FC to iSCSI
  • Reduce Storage TCO
  • Implement iSCSI SAN

30
Storage virtualisation
  • Pooling of disparate systems into single
    consolidated view a storage pool
  • Removes LUN limitation and resizing issues
  • Also enables snapshotting, replication etc
  • Re-deploy existing storage arrays
  • In band Feature rich
  • Out of band Out of data path

31
Storage Management
  • Disparate systems, protocols, vendors leading to
  • Increased management overhead
  • SNIA developed SMI-S (Bluefin)

Storage Networking Industry Association Storage
Management Initiative Specification
32
SMI-S - what is it?
  • Create common interface enabling software and
    hardware work together
  • Common Information Mode (CMI) and Web Based
    Enterprise Management (WBEM) used to describe
    common storage models and functions
  • Vendors write interfaces to allow their hw/sw to
    share data
  • Reduction in number of storage management tools
    required
  • EMC, HP, IBM, CA, HDS backed

33
Summary
  • Fibre SAN
  • Best performance
  • High cost, new skills
  • iSCSI SAN
  • Simpler implementation
  • Leverage existing investment in technology and
    skills
  • Virtualisation
  • Lower storage TCO
  • Improve data availability
  • NAS
  • Mixed NAS/SAN environments
  • Storage Management
  • New standards being developed

34
Thank you
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