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Storage Networking Strategic Decision-Making

Storage Networking Strategic Decision-Making. Randy Kerns Evaluator Group, Inc. www.evaluatorgroup.com. Agenda. Recap – What you’ve heard Storage Networking Definition, what problem is being solved Differing Solutions SAN – FC, IP (iSCSI, iFCP, FCIP) NAS Framework For Decision-Making

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Storage Networking Strategic Decision-Making

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  1. Storage Networking Strategic Decision-Making Randy Kerns Evaluator Group, Inc. www.evaluatorgroup.com

  2. Agenda • Recap – What you’ve heard • Storage Networking • Definition, what problem is being solved • Differing Solutions • SAN – FC, IP (iSCSI, iFCP, FCIP) • NAS • Framework For Decision-Making • Evaluation • Requirements based on market segment • Where proposed solutions best fit • Considerations for your environment • Roadmap for choosing storage networking solution • Methodology to approach problem

  3. Storage Networking • Definition – from SNIA • The practice of creating, installing, administering, or using networks whose primary purpose is the transfer of data between computer systems and storage elements and among storage elements. • What problems are being solved • Near-term: consolidation, backup • Wider-view: storage growth

  4. Different Solutions • Storage Area Networks • Fibre channel based • Fabric switched network for SANs • High bandwidth – 1, 2 Gb/s now, 10 Gb/s mid 2002 • Low latency – hardware intensive implementation • Block I/O – SCSI as ULP for fibre channel • Interoperability • Solved with significant investment from vendors • Independent lab and certification underway • Maturing – significant deployment • Major vendors • Products • Commitment for long term • Management and the abstraction of storage

  5. Different Solutions • Storage Area Networks • IP based • Over Ethernet with TCPIP encapsulation for most • Various methods – proposals for standards • Block I/O via encapsulation • iSCSI • Tunneling • iFCP • FCIP • Targeting OLTP at higher transaction rate than NAS

  6. Different Solutions • Storage Area Networks • IP based – iSCSI - uses SCSI commands over IP • Target is to provide block I/O using Ethernet infrastructure • No mechanism in Ethernet/IP to allow for command-response structure of SCSI • SCSI is block oriented storage interface • Uses a software driver to control SCSI protocol • Ethernet / IP has network characteristics • No flow control – drops packets on congestion • Packet size is limited – get smaller as contention increases • iSCSI attempts to work within these constraints • iSCSI standard proposes to encapsulate SCSI on TCP • Many vendors – some haven’t been in storage before

  7. Different Solutions • Storage Area Networks • IP based – iFCP, internet Fibre Channel Protocol • Transfers FCP across IP networks • Gateways used to encapsulate FCP on IP • Useful for extended distances for FC connections • Translates FC frame addresses to new local IP address • ‘Transparent’ view of storage devices • Connects FC devices to TCP/IP backbone • IP based – FCIP, Fibre Channel Internet Protocol • Tunneling FCP across IP • Gateways/switches act as E-port extenders • Useful for SAN to SAN linkage over extended distances • Does not change FC address of frames between SANs • Makes a large SAN with single address space

  8. Different Solutions • Storage Area Networks • InfiniBand • Developing technology to replace PCI in servers • Will extend from server to fabric • Connect storage, networks, etc. • Switch / routers will be initial connect • Question is: when will native InfiniBand devices appear? • Infrastructure change – will happen • Probably 5 years to reach into storage

  9. Different Solutions • Network Attached Storage • NAS Appliances • Remote file serving • Clustering option • Starting to see abstraction within same vendor solutions

  10. Different Solutions • Network Attached Storage • DAFS • VI based • Remote DMA • File-based access • Targeting OLTP at higher transaction rate than NAS • YE2001 availability

  11. Different Solutions • Convergence – blurring of the lines • Gateway – NAS “head” • Connect to SAN storage • Benefits of scaling storage, administration

  12. Different Solutions • Convergence – blurring of the lines • Metadata server solutions • NAS control for access • SAN block I/O for data to achieve high performance

  13. Different Solutions • Convergence – blurring of the lines • Distributed SAN file systems • SAN data can be local file system Host A Host B Host C Cluster Sfw Cluster Sfw Cluster Sfw Cluster File System Cluster File System Cluster File System Cluster Vol Cluster Vol Cluster Vol SAN Single File System Common file system on shared storage Highly available Application transparent

  14. Framework for Decision making • Evaluation • Understand your requirements • Business • Technical • Understand the vendor offerings • Targeted at a specific market segment • Characteristics may not fit your requirements • Need to have long-term view

  15. Markets

  16. Requirements by Segment • Enterprise DataCenter • Reliability – 100% availability of data • Guaranteed performance – response time, data rate • Scalability – capacity and performance • Security – guaranteed and provable • Long-term support from vendor • Tools for storage and performance management • Integration into mature procedural environment

  17. Requirements by Segment • Departmental (Small Business) / Workgroup • Cost • Simple administration • Quick ROI • Multi vendor: server, OS, storage systems • New E-business • Cost • Simple administration • Potential large capacity • Availability by replication • Mature into traditional IT environment

  18. Where Does Solution Best Fit • Enterprise DataCenter • FC-based SANs • High performance, highly scalable • Designed for storage – fits requirements for enterprise storage • Security implementation / control familiar to storage professionals • Significant deployment in enterprise (Fortune 1000 companies) • NAS • Appliances in mainly R/O environments • Metadata server in file sharing / performance environments

  19. Where Does Solution Best Fit • Departmental (Small Business) / Workgroup • IP based SANs • May be least cost • Few storage-only professionals (normally system administrators with multiple responsibilities) • Perception of simplicity • NAS • Appliances • SAN file systems • Gateway • FC based SANs • Complete solutions without major installation effort

  20. Where Does Solution Best Fit • New E-business • In SSP and professional service installed / managed environments: FC based SANs • IP-based SANs for existing and growth environments • NAS • Appliances • Gateway • All of the above

  21. Other Considerations • Considerations for your environment • Will there be multiple storage networks? • Independent? • Distance • What information needs to flow? • What are the bandwidth, response time requirements? • Plan for the future • Growth • Additional requirements • Security • applications

  22. Storage Network Linkage • Enterprise to Enterprise • Data migration over extended distances • Performance requirements and distance dictate connection • Transfer over IP • Multiple solutions • ATM, other tunneling solutions • Business continuance • Remote copy – critical performance characteristic drive connection topology • SAN may be utilized by storage system to storage system copy (example PPRC) • System-level issue not just data movement

  23. Storage Network Linkage • Enterprise to Enterprise

  24. Storage Network Linkage • Departmental to Enterprise • Data distribution, upload, etc. • Data protection • Dynamic access based on demand frequency • IP or FC based – depends on economics, performance, administration, etc. • Distance required – campus based vs. extended distance • Centralized management, security, etc.

  25. Storage Network Linkage • Departmental to Enterprise

  26. Roadmap for Making Decisions • Determine strategic business requirements • business environment dictates requirements • Determine storage capacity and expected growth • benefit for implementing storage network • management costs with growth • Current operational changes required • short term and long term • staffing and infrastructure

  27. Getting Started • Make an informed decision: use a solution provider or roll your own • expertise required • who do you call when there is a problem • who’s going to manage this • who guarantees it and will make good • Become educated in either case

  28. Deployment • Consider a phased implementation • new technology introduction requires learning curve • asset protection • ease of integration • minimize risk • Start building infrastructure • physical plant • skilled staff

  29. Deployment • Start with simple configuration • bring online first as shake-out • make it local • use the storage management software chosen • ensure common reporting mechanisms • make sure it works from the console you’ve chosen • Build larger configuration when satisfied • Get guarantee of interoperability!!!

  30. Deployment • Test • failure modes • addition to capacity • addition of servers • addition of switches and hubs • service / maintenance (7X24) • performance • normal operations • degraded • limits • backup • restore

  31. Deployment • If solution provider is also a storage vendor - test replacement of their storage device with a competitor • Review your management choice – it is the most important one to make

  32. Summary • Many different solutions • Many from companies with no experience in storage products • Great deal of hype and mis-information now • One size does not fit all • Differing requirements • Economics matter • Administration value • Extensibility – handle growth • Linking Storage Networks is important planning requirement • Multiple organizations involved • Critical decision for your company – choose wisely

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