SHARE
Facebook X Pinterest WhatsApp

SNIA Announces Technology Contribution

The Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA) announced that it has received an offer of a substantial new contribution of technology aimed at advancing standards-based SAN Management by a group of storage industry vendors. The contributors have developed a draft specification that applies CIM/WBEM object technology to create the basis of a complete management solution for […]

May 27, 2002
Enterprise Storage Forum content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More

The Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA) announced that it has received an offer of a substantial new contribution of technology aimed at advancing standards-based SAN Management by a group of storage industry vendors.

The contributors have developed a draft specification that applies CIM/WBEM object technology to create the basis of a complete management solution for interoperable, multi-vendor SANs.

The contributing companies and the SNIA are cooperating to create a transition plan that addresses the appropriate level of incorporation into SNIA technical and marketing activities. The transition plan is expected to be complete in July.
The Challenge of SAN Management

“Managing the complexity of SANs has become a key user issue – a problem that is compounded by the multi-vendor environment most users have,” said John Webster, Senior Analyst at the Data Mobility Group. “Without comprehensive standards for management and testing for interoperability, users will be forced to pay artificially high prices for solutions and as a result, will find it more difficult to achieve the promised value of storage networking.”

The industry requires a comprehensive standard architecture for managing devices such as disk arrays, switches, and hosts in a SAN. The standard must include a common model of device behavior, and a common language to read and set control information. This subject has been the focus of work within SNIA since its founding in 1997.

Recognizing the need for a standards based approach, the contributing companies have worked together to draft a specification for a proposed common interface for SAN management that can reliably identify, classify, monitor and control physical and logical resources across the enterprise using a common transport for communication. The specification, code-named `Bluefin’, employs technology from the Web Based Enterprise Management (WBEM) initiative that uses the Managed Object Format (MOF) to describe system resources based on a Common Information Model (CIM). Bluefin introduces new technology for security, locking, and discovery for SAN management.

By contributing the specification the contributors seek to leverage the technical workgroup and marketing resources of the SNIA to complete and extend the Bluefin work. The contributing companies are: BMC Software, Brocade Communications Systems, Inc., Computer Associates, Dell Computer Corporation, EMC Corporation, Emulex Corporation, Gadzoox Networks , Hewlett-Packard Company , Hitachi Ltd, IBM, JNI Corporation, Prisa Networks, QLogic, StorageTek , Sun Microsystems and VERITAS Software.

Recommended for you...

SAN vs HCI – Understanding the Differences
Jenna Phipps
Oct 6, 2023
How to Create a Multi-Cloud Strategy
Mary Shacklett
Sep 20, 2023
Product News: New FDP Mode Test Solution for SSDs
Chris Bernard
Jul 25, 2023
News: Rubrik to Integrate With Microsoft 365 Backup
Chris Bernard
Jul 18, 2023
Enterprise Storage Forum Logo

Enterprise Storage Forum offers practical information on data storage and protection from several different perspectives: hardware, software, on-premises services and cloud services. It also includes storage security and deep looks into various storage technologies, including object storage and modern parallel file systems. ESF is an ideal website for enterprise storage admins, CTOs and storage architects to reference in order to stay informed about the latest products, services and trends in the storage industry.

Property of TechnologyAdvice. © 2025 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.