Many of the country's largest systems vendors and storage technology
specialists have converged at the Storage
Networking World 2003 event in Phoenix this week to announce new wares,
or demonstrate how their existing products work with vital emerging
standards.
New products introduced Not surprisingly, many of the new products concern IP-based storage, and
consist of iSCSI (define) offerings and Fibre Channel (define) products. Cisco Systems Monday unveiled three IP storage networking products that will
allow customers to expand their Fibre Channel storage area networks (SANs)
to additional servers and applications within data centers across large
distances.
In a demonstration of how major vendors are designing products that
accommodate the two main connectivity standards, Cisco's MDS 9000 IP Storage
Services Module, FCIP Port Adapter for the Cisco 7200 and Cisco 7400 Series
and SN 5428-2 Storage Router connect to Fibre Channel-attached devices using
the newer iSCSI protocol or mainstay Fibre Channel over IP (FCIP) protocol.
Due in June, MDS 9000 IP Storage Services Module is an 8-port line card that
can support iSCSI and FCIP on each Gigabit Ethernet port. At $9,995, the
FCIP Port Adapter is geared for customers who have already deployed multiple
Fibre Channel SANs and need FCIP to interconnect these SANs over long
distances. An upgrade, Cisco SN 5428-2 Storage Router offers FCIP capability
on the platform's two Gigabit Ethernet ports, which also support iSCSI. It
is priced at $11,995.
For San Jose, Calif.'s Cisco, the move is a considerable upgrade to its
storage networking suite because it offers customers the ability to choose
from any combination of Fibre Channel, iSCSI and FCIP technologies to build
or expand their SANs. This choice is something analysts have been stressing
as iSCSI has been finding its way toward maturity.
More broadly, IP storage networking makes it easier and less expensive for
organizations to deploy storage area networks (SANs) for e-mail, database,
disaster recovery, LAN-free backup, consolidation and other storage
applications because it uses standard Ethernet components. IP SANs use
Ethernet components to reduce costs of networked storage.
"IP storage networking technologies take advantage of connectivity provided
by IP to extend the value and utility of Fibre Channel SANs," said James
Opfer, Research VP with Gartner Dataquest. "iSCSI offers very favorable
incremental cost for each additional server connected to a SAN, especially
for small servers where the cost of Fibre Channel host bus adapters is
prohibitive. FCIP is a SAN extension technology that allow users to
interconnect SANs well beyond the reach of pure Fibre Channel, making it
useful for business continuity applications."
Frequent Cisco partner Adaptec joined the SNW party Monday, too, releasing what it claims are
the first ASIC-based IP storage networking host bus adapters built on iSCSI.
The Milpitas, Calif. firm's goal is to help midsize companies migrate from
direct-attached storage to network storage.
The Adaptec iSCSI Adapters 7211C and 7211F feature an Adaptec TCP/IP offload
technology that moves processing of TCP/IP packets out of the operating
system and implements it in hardware on the card to reduce CPU utilization.
The adapters support Windows 2000, Windows NT and Redhat Linux and support
for copper (7211C) and fiber (7211F) media.
With the help of Network Appliance, Adaptec has conducted beta deployments of IP SAN
products for such customers as Trimble, Sandia Labs and the University of
Michigan. The adapters support e-mail, database, CRM and ERP, consolidation,
disaster recovery and LAN-free backup on Windows and Linux platforms.
The ASA-7211C and ASA-7211F retail for $660 and $715, respectively. The
cards are now shipping to distributors and resellers and are under
evaluation by major OEMs.
Also, Adaptec rival QLogic
Monday unveiled 4-gigabit-per-second Fibre Channel products to ease the
industry transition to 10 gigabit architecture.
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