August 29th, 2013
Our VN2VN Webcast last week was extremely well received. The audience was big and highly engaged. Here is a summary of the questions attendees asked and answers from my colleague, Joe White, and me. If you missed the Webcast, it’s now available on demand.
Question #1:
We are an extremely large FC shop with well over 50K native FC ports. We are looking to bridge this to the FCoE environment for the future. What does VN2VN buy the larger company? Seems like SMB is a much better target for this.
Answer #1: It’s true that for large port count SAN … Read the rest
No Comments » |
Ethernet Data Storage, Fibre Channel of Ethernet (FCoE) SIG |
Permalink
Posted by David Fair
April 18th, 2013
Seamus Crehan, President, Crehan Research Inc.
2H12 results
2012 turned out be another very strong growth year for 10 Gigabit Ethernet (10GbE), with the data center switch market and the server-class adapter and LAN-on-Motherboard (LOM) market both growing more than 50%. Broad long-term trends such as virtualization, convergence, data center network traffic growth, cloud deployments, and price declines were helped further by more specific demand drivers, many of which materialized in the latter half of 2012. These included the adoption of Romley servers, expanded 10GBASE-T product offerings for both switches and servers, 10GbE LOM solutions for volume rack servers (which … Read the rest
No Comments » |
Ethernet Data Storage, Fibre Channel of Ethernet (FCoE) SIG |
Permalink
Posted by Seamus Crehan
April 15th, 2013
Storage traffic running over Ethernet-based networks has been around for as long as we have had Ethernet-based networks. Of course sometimes it is technically not accurate to think of the protocols as fundamentally Ethernet protocols – whilst FCoE, by definition, only runs on Ethernet, iSCSI, SMB, and NFS, they are, in reality, IP-based storage protocols and whilst most commonly run on Ethernet, could run on any network that supports IP. That notwithstanding, it is increasingly important to understand the real nature of Ethernet, and in particular, the nature of the new enhancements that we put under the umbrella of Data … Read the rest
No Comments » |
Ethernet Data Storage, Fibre Channel of Ethernet (FCoE) SIG |
Permalink
Posted by Simon Gordon
March 5th, 2013
A challenge with traditional iSCSI deployments is the non-deterministic nature of Ethernet networks. When Ethernet networks only carried non-storage traffic, lost data packets where not a big issue as they would get retransmitted. However; as we layered storage traffic over Ethernet, lost data packets became a “no no” as storage traffic is not as forgiving as non-storage traffic and data retransmissions introduced I/O delays which are unacceptable to storage traffic. In addition, traditional Ethernet also had no mechanism to assign priorities to classes of I/O.
Therefore a new solution was needed. Short of creating a separate Ethernet network to handle … Read the rest
No Comments » |
Ethernet Data Storage, Fibre Channel of Ethernet (FCoE) SIG |
Permalink
Posted by Allen Ordoubadian
January 8th, 2013
For nearly a decade, the primary deployment of 10 Gigabit Ethernet (10GbE) has been using network interface cards (NICs) supporting enhanced Small Form-Factor Pluggable (SFP+) transceivers. The predominant transceivers for 10GbE are Direct Attach (DA) copper, short range optical (10GBASE-SR), and long-range optical (10GBASE-LR). The Direct Attach copper option is the least expensive of the three. However, its adoption has been hampered by two key limitations:
- DA’s range is limited to 7m, and
- because of the SFP+ connector, it is not backward-compatible with existing 1GbE infrastructure using RJ-45 connectors and twisted-pair cabling.
10GBASE-T addresses both of these limitations.… Read the rest
No Comments » |
Ethernet Data Storage, Fibre Channel of Ethernet (FCoE) SIG |
Permalink
Posted by David Fair
August 8th, 2011
As the migration to 10Gb Ethernet moves forward, many data centers are looking to converge network and storage I/O to fully utilize a ten-fold increase in bandwidth. Industry discussions continue regarding the merits of 10GbE iSCSI and FCoE. Some of the key benefits of both protocols were presented in an iSCSI SIG webcast that included Maziar Tamadon and Jason Blosil on July 19th: Two Storage Trails on the 10Gb Convergence Path
It’s a win-win solution as both technologies offer significant performance improvements and cost savings. The discussion is sure to continue.
Since there wasn’t enough time to respond to all … Read the rest
No Comments » |
Fibre Channel of Ethernet (FCoE) SIG, File Protocols SIG |
Permalink
Posted by SteveAbbott
April 11th, 2011
Are you considering deploying an iSCSI storage network, and would like to learn some of the best practices of configuring the environment, from host to storage? Well, now you can learn from an expert. The SNIA Ethernet Storage Forum will be sponsoring a live webcast with our guest speaker, Dennis Martin from Demartek. Dennis will share first-hand expertise and actionable best practices to effectively deploy iSCSI storage networks. A live Q&A will also be included. It doesn’t matter if you have a large, medium or small environment, Dennis will provide application specific recommendations that you won’t want to miss.
When: … Read the rest
No Comments » |
Fibre Channel of Ethernet (FCoE) SIG |
Permalink
Posted by Jason Blosil
March 14th, 2011
by: Gary Gumanow
Last Wednesday (2/24/11), I hosted an Ethernet Storage Forum iSCSI SIG webinar with representatives from Emulex and NetApp to discuss the benefits of iSCSI storage networks in SQL application environments. You can catch a recording of the webcast on BrightTalk here.
The webinar was well attended, and while we received so many great questions during the webinar we just didn’t have time to answer all of them. Which brings us to this blogpost. We have included answers to these unanswered questions in our blog below.
We’ll be hosting another webinar real soon, so please check back … Read the rest
No Comments » |
Ethernet Data Storage, Fibre Channel of Ethernet (FCoE) SIG, File Protocols SIG |
Permalink
Posted by Gary Gumanow