September 18th, 2014
Imagine evaporating your existing file server into the cloud with the same experience and level of control that you currently have on-premises. On October 1st, ESF will host a live Webcast that introduces the concept of Cloud File Services and discusses the pros and cons you need to consider. There are numerous companies and startups …Read More
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Ethernet Data Storage, File Protocols SIG, NFS, SMB |
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Posted by David Fair
May 27th, 2014
Presumptuous, yes, because Ethernet has been a mainstay in enterprises since its early days over 40 years ago. It initially grew to prominence as the local area network (LAN) connection in the enterprise. More recent advances have enabled Ethernet to become a standard for mission critical storage connectivity for block, file and object storage in …Read More
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Ethernet Data Storage, FCoE, File Protocols SIG, NFS, Object Storage |
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Posted by Mike Jochimsen
January 28th, 2014
Technology continues to advance rapidly. Making sense of it all can be a challenge. At the SNIA Ethernet Storage Forum, we focus on storage technologies and solutions enabled by and associated with Ethernet Networks. Last year, we modified the charters of our two Special Interest Groups (SIG) to address topics about file protocols and storage …Read More
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FCoE, File Protocols SIG, iSCSI, NFS, SMB, Storage over Ethernet SIG |
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Posted by Jason Blosil
November 6th, 2013
SUSE, founded in 1992, provides an enterprise ready Linux distribution in the form of SLES; the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server. As of late last month (October 22, 2013), SUSE announced that SLES 11 with service pack 3 now supports the Linux client for NFSv4.1 and pNFS client. This major distribution joins RedHat’s RHEL (RedHat Enterprise …Read More
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File Protocols SIG, NFS |
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Posted by AlexMcDonald
April 30th, 2013
In this third and final blog post on NFS (see previous blog posts Why NFSv4.1 and pNFS are Better than NFSv3 Could Ever Be and The Advantages of NFSv4.1) I’ll cover pNFS (parallel NFS), an optional feature of NFSv4.1 that improves the bandwidth available for NFS protocol access, and some of the proposed features of …Read More
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File Protocols SIG, NFS |
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Posted by AlexMcDonald
March 21st, 2013
Red Hat Enterprise Linux shipped their first commercially supported parallel NFS client on February 21st. The Red Hat ecosystem can deploy pNFS with the confidence of engineering, test, and long-term support of the industry standard protocol. Red Hat Engineering has been working with the upstream community and several SNIA ESF member companies to backport …Read More
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File Protocols SIG, NFS |
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Posted by Doug O'Flaherty
February 19th, 2013
In a previous blog post Why NFSv4.1 and pNFS are Better than NFSv3 Could Ever Be, some of the issues with NFSv3 that made it difficult to implement as a WAN based or data center wide protocol were discussed. The question then becomes; why not move to NFSv4 instead of NFSv4.1? Isn’t that a bigger …Read More
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File Protocols SIG, NFS |
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Posted by AlexMcDonald
January 14th, 2013
A significant challenge in managing large amounts of data (or Big Data) is a lack of what I like to call “total data awareness”. It’s a situation where you know (or suspect) that you have data - you just can’t find it. When you think about many current IT environments, they are often not built …Read More
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File Protocols SIG, NFS |
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Posted by Ingo Fuchs
December 20th, 2012
As we come to a close of the year 2012, I want to share some of our successes and briefly highlight some new changes for 2013. Calendar year 2012 has been eventful and the SNIA-ESF has been busy. Here are some of our accomplishments: 10GbE – With virtualization and network convergence, as well as the …Read More
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FCoE, File Protocols SIG, iSCSI, NFS, SMB, Storage over Ethernet SIG |
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Posted by Jason Blosil
December 18th, 2012
NFSv4 has been a standard file sharing protocol since 2003, but has not been widely adopted; party because NFSv3 was “just good enough”. Yet, NFSv4 improves on NFSv3 in many important ways; and NFSv4.1 is a further improvement on that. In this post, I explain the how NFSv4.1 is better suited to a wide range …Read More
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File Protocols SIG, NFS |
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Posted by AlexMcDonald