1 / 28

COEN 180

COEN 180. NAS / SAN. Storage Trends. Storage Trends: Money is spend on administration. Morris, Truskowski: The evolution of storage systems, IBM Systems Journal, Vol. 42(2). Direct Attached, SAN, NAS Storage.

benny
Download Presentation

COEN 180

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. COEN 180 NAS / SAN

  2. Storage Trends • Storage Trends: • Money is spend on administration Morris, Truskowski: The evolution of storage systems, IBM Systems Journal, Vol. 42(2)

  3. Direct Attached, SAN, NAS Storage Morris, Truskowski: The evolution of storage systems, IBM Systems Journal, Vol. 42(2)

  4. Direct Attached, SAN, NAS Storage Morris, Truskowski: The evolution of storage systems, IBM Systems Journal, Vol. 42(2)

  5. Direct Attached, SAN, NAS Storage Morris, Truskowski: The evolution of storage systems, IBM Systems Journal, Vol. 42(2)

  6. Direct Attached, SAN, NAS Storage Morris, Truskowski: The evolution of storage systems, IBM Systems Journal, Vol. 42(2)

  7. NAS • Network Attached Storage (NAS) • Each storage device has its own network interface. • Filers: storage device that interfaces at the level of a distributed file system. • Network File System: NFS (Unix) • Common Internet File System CFIS (MS Win) • Flexible. • Sharing of storage. • Vulnerable. • Sharing network makes megatasks such as back-up difficult.

  8. NAS

  9. NAS • Trends favoring NAS: • Storage devices become more intelligent. • Object based storage. • Storage devices become application aware.

  10. NAS Advantages • NAS devices are stand-alone. • Have their own OS, networking, integrated hardware, and software. • NAS devices offer shared storage, accessible from a number of platforms. • NAS devices can easily be added on to an existing network.

  11. SAN • Storage Area Networks • Low costs • High transfer • Use a dedicated network.

  12. SAN

  13. SAN • Host Layer • Consists of storage servers and components necessary to connect to SAN. • HBA • Gigabit Interface Converter (GBIC) / Gigabit Link Converter (GLC) • Host Bus Adapter Drivers • Cables

  14. SAN • Network Technology • Fibre Channel • IP over Ethernet.

  15. SAN • Gigabit Interface Converter • Converts to optical fiber. • Short wave: • Laser frequency between 780 and 850 nm. • Used for distances between .5m and 500m. • Long wave: • Laser frequency at 1300 nm. • Used for distances between 2 m and 10km. • Newer long-wave GBIC up to 100 km.

  16. SAN • Full duplex transmission

  17. SAN • Fabric Layer • Contains the components necessary to connect storage servers with storage devices. • Hubs • Switches • Routers: • Bridge between SCSI and Fibre Channel • Cables

  18. SAN • Storage Layer • Monolithic • Large with many disk drives • Modular • Controller shelf plus single shelf of disks. • Add more shelves as needs grow.

  19. SAN • Storage Array Manufacturers • Mainframe Class • Hitachi • IBM • EMC • Modular Class • Hitachi • Compaq • Hewlett Packard • EMC • IBM • XIOtech • LSI Logic • Sun Microsystems • MTI

  20. Fibre Channel • Basic Fibre Channel Topologies • Point to Point • Switched Fabric • Arbitrated Loop.

  21. Fibre Channel • Point-to-point • Eliminates need to invest in fabric • Other than cables. • Storage devices have more than one port and can connect to as many servers as they have ports.

  22. Fibre Channel • Arbitrated Loops • Physically, consists of Fibre Channel hubs. • Internally, uses the FC-AL protocol. • Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop. • Can deal with 128 devices. • But looses performance much earlier.

  23. Fibre Channel • Switched Fabric • Switches come in • Modular class • 8 – 16 ports. • Multiple fans, power supply, etc. • Single controller component • A single point of failure. • Director class • 32, 64, … ports • Blades of ports. • Redundant components.

  24. Fibre Channel • Switched Fabric • Run at 1Gb/sec • Run at 2Gb/sec • Will run at 10Gb/sec

  25. Fibre Channel • Switched Fabric • Different Topologies • Dual switches • Loop of switches • Meshed fabric • Star • Core-edge switch switch

  26. Fibre Channel • Fibre Channel Protocol • FC-4: Upper Layer Protocol Interface supports VI, IP, and most importantly, serial SCSI-3 (FCP). The task of FCP is to make fibre channel devices appear as standard SCSI devices to each other. This strategy avoids OS modifications in the storage servers. • FC-3: Common Services, is currently under development and will contain such services as striping a transmission over several ports, hunt groups that allow more than one port to respond to the same alias address (in order to decrease chances of hitting on a busy port), and multicasting. • FC-2: Data Delivery codifies framing, flow control and service class. A fibre channel frame consists of 32B frame meta data framing a 2112 B data field that contains up to 2048B payload. The fiber channel service classes allow either an in effect a virtual physical connection (class 1), or packet switched connections with (class 1) or without (class 2) acknowledgments. • FC-1: Ordered sets / byte encoding. • FC-0: Physical interface (optical/electrical, cable plant).

  27. Fibre Channel

  28. SAN /NAS

More Related