|
| Recent
Articles |
Symantec Sues Microsoft Over Veritas
Once upon a time, Microsoft licensed a version of
Veritas Volume Manager and used it in Windows 2000;
Symantec now owns Veritas and wants Microsoft to
pay for continuing to use that technology.
Storage Problems Simplified "Our central file system was getting hammered in a way it had never been hammered before. The NFS caches couldn't go fast enough -- they did not have enough RAM on them." Greg Brandeau, Pixar
Robots.txt Hints At Google Unlimited Data Storage
Garett Rogers, who clearly checks Google's robots.txt
before breakfast every day, spotted
a new reference in it, to /uds/, which he speculates
may refer to Google Unlimited Data Storage...
SAN and NAS: What's In A Name?
Did you read Tony
Asaro's latest? In his blog he talks about the
end of SAN and NAS - and he's right. Do you think
anyone really cares about SAN or NAS?
HP
Invited Lab To Shoot Its Hardware
The high-tech ballistics center managed by National Technical Systems (NTS) in Camden, AR, pulled off the kind of test that system administrators worldwide dream about: taking a rifle and putting a bullet into a piece of hardware.
Use Multi Flash Card Readers to Overcome... As advanced consumer electronics like digital cameras, PDAs, multimedia mobile phones, and similar devices become increasingly affordable to the everyday user, we find ourselves having to keep track of more and more...
End User Council at Storage Networking World Storage Networking World (SNW) Spring 2006 is covering a lot of new ground. One area of discussion is going to be interoperability and the Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA) End User Council (EUC) will attempt to explain the issues surrounding interoperability.
Backups, On-line Storage, and Stupidity We're living in interesting times. With today's release of Amazon.com's S3 on-line storage service, we're one step closer to the cheap on-line storage that so many don't believe will be useful.
|
|
|
|
06.12.06 The Network Is The Storage Device By
David A. Utter A new protocol allows for the usage of an Ethernet network and a bunch of low cost disks to store large amounts of data.
"Anyway...," the boss burbles in simulated intelligence mode, "I was just wandering through the department today and a thought struck me. What with the rising cost of disk it might be an interesting plan to use our networks as a storage medium..."
He goes on to paraphrase the food-waste-product that we fed him, while commenting that he's fired off an order for 20 drums of Cat-5.
The explosion is inevitable. The head of department, whilst in practical terms about as useful as loopback plug for an electric type-writer, did spend about six years teaching networking fundamentals to first year university students.
-- The BOFH wins an award from his peer group..., from 1997's BOFH collection by Simon Travaglia.
Nine years later, the befuddled boss of BOFH lore looks prophetic. The ATA-over-Ethernet (AoE) protocol creates a storage area network (SAN), using an Ethernet network along with those ATA drives, NetworkWorld writer Brantley Coile (who co-authored AoE) reported.
Coile described how AoE would be less complex to implement than Fibre Channel or TCP/IP. AoE does not require TCP/IP to carry ATA disk commands.
AoE's approach uses cheap ATA disks to store data, and conceivably has unlimited scalability. It works with Ethernet to enable the SAN:
AoE is a command/response protocol that puts Ethernet connectors on diskdrives. AoE clients use a block device driver (initiator), which lets a very large number of AoE devices (targets) appear as local disks. The AoE protocol enables a driver to discover target devices using configuration information stored in those devices.
Two types of messages are transferred via AoE. One carries ATA disk commands, and the other is used for discovering AoE targets.
Those targets can be single disks, or arrays of RAID volumes; the storage devices can be partitioned as needed. "Because AoE devices are block storage, they can be used as raw storage disks or mounted with any disk file system. AoE devices can be managed with volume-management software tools and become part of large storage systems," Coile wrote.
With AoE drivers included in many Linux distributions, they could enable the cheap creation of massive storage systems to support demanding media types like video and images.
About the Author: David Utter is a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business. |