ANSI Agrees on Serial Attached SCSI Standard

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Despite being such a nascent technology, Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) has been bubbling with development over the past year among storage vendors anxious to tap into the next-generation storage technology.

Now it has earned the blessing of the SCSI Trade Association (STA) and the International Committee for Information Technology Standards (INCITS), operating under the internationally-recognized American National Standards Institute
(ANSI), which approved SAS Wednesday as a stable standard.

SAS is the natural extension of SCSI , a parallel interface standard used for hooking peripheral devices to computers. But SCSI has been reaching its limits in terms of the scale and complexity of infrastructure it can handle.

This has become a problem because many customers are seeking more powerful storage systems that can handle greater numbers of users. Storage vendors are anxious to supply them, and members of the STA, including hardware makers Intel, Adaptec, Maxtor, HP, and a number of other SAS vendors, have been working to deliver on the demand.

SAS is considered far superior due to its more modern software architecture and hardware topology, which meet enterprise-class scales of capacity, density, and scalability, according to Martin Czekalski, interface architecture initiatives manager at hard drive maker Maxtor, one of the STA member
companies.

“SCSI was great for awhile. It carried everything forward and had backward compatibility, but when vendors wanted to migrate and evolve they found there were limitations in parallel technology,” Czekalski told internetnews.com. “The underlying technology in SCSI is similar to SAS, but SAS offers an increase in ASICs , integration, and silicon. It’s more cost-effective, and provides better performance.”

For example, the cable sizes are much thinner in serial technology than in its parallel brethren, which normally runs a cable with 68 wires, or “pins.” These wires would have to go to every device or drive. With SAS, “all you need is 4 wires, two to transmit and two to receive, so you don’t have to daisy chain the same wires into every drive,” says Czekalski, calling the parallel approach the electrical equivalent of driving on a crowded freeway.

The architect also points out that with serial technology the wires won’t get confused with one another. Instead of point-to-point connections, the SAS cables are threaded through an ‘expander,’ which acts as a sort of switch — “sort of like an Ethernet switch, which handles multiple connections.”

This different topology allows for superior performance, Czekalski continues. While SCSI wires run at 20 megabytes per second, SAS runs each wire at 300
megabytes per second. In addition, the switch architecture of SAS allows ‘multiple lanes,’ enabling switches to cascade to thousands of drives. This
makes it possible to install much larger systems and employ more devices.

SAS also allows different types of drives in same system, making it possible for high-performance devices and applications to work in the same storage pool with low-cost, smaller devices. Accordingly, Czekalski says the alignment of SAS and Serial ATA technologies to serve storage users will provide more flexibility to the storage industry.

The standard is the culmination of a lot of late nights and hard work over the last year and a half by the STA and its members. OEMs began preparing products for market some six months ago, and several hardware vendors, particularly hard drive makers, have demonstrated working SAS products and are now beginning to announce product availability.

For example, Hitachi Data Systems said Wednesday that its Hitachi GST is the first hard drive vendor to demonstrate SAS interoperability. Last month, Fujitsu unveiled its first SAS hard drive interface.

The STA has planned several plugfests throughout the year to assist OEMs in preparing their SAS products for market.

Story courtesy of Internet News.

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Clint Boulton
Clint Boulton
Clint Boulton is an Enterprise Storage Forum contributor and a senior writer for CIO.com covering IT leadership, the CIO role, and digital transformation.

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