Thursday, July 26, 2007

Cisco expands storage horizons

Network World

Storage in the Enterprise




Network World's Storage in the Enterprise Newsletter, 07/26/07

Cisco expands storage horizons

By Deni Connor

Cisco this week is doing its best to dominate the storage-area networking market currently held by Brocade.

The company introduced three new SAN products and a new version of its operating systems at its Networkers at Cisco Live conference in Anaheim, Calif.

Cisco introduced SAN-OS 3.2, an operating environment for its multiprotocol SAN switches that includes encryption of data on disks and tapes, migration of data across heterogeneous arrays and support for simplified blade server management, as well as 4Gbps Fibre Channel connectivity.

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The company also unveiled three hardware products: the MDS 9222i Multiservice Modular Switch, the MDS 18/4-Port Multiservice Module and the MDS 9134 Multilayer Fabric Switch.

Encryption and data migration are enabled on the MDS 9222i and MDS 18/4. Both the MDS 9222i switch and the MDS 18/4 blade provide Fibre Channel, FICON, Fibre Channel over IP (FCIP) and iSCSI support. Further, they each supply 18 4Gbps Fibre Channel ports and four 1Gbps Ethernet IP Storage Services ports. SAN routing is enabled on each port.

In addition, both support hardware-based FCIP compression and IPsec encryption for both disk and tape. They also support IPv6 and are FIPS (Federal Information Processing Standard) certified. Both use AES256 encryption.

The Data Mobility Manager, which runs on the MDS9222i and MDS 18/4, migrates data between storage arrays for storage consolidation, tiering, technology refreshes and workload balancing. It support heterogeneous arrays and is non-disruptive. A command line interface and a wizard help the customer manage migrations.

The MDS 9134 is a 32-port 4Gbps Fibre Channel switch with two 10Gbps Fibre Channel ports for connecting to other switches. It is available in a 1U (1.75-inch) form factor and supports stacking of two switches for higher density.

The N-Port Virtualizer (NPV) capability allows a blade switch operating as a Fibre Channel switch to act as virtual host bus adapter to servers. It reduces the number of domain IDs necessary and is available for IBM and HP blade switches and MDS 9124 and 9134 Fabric switches. NPV is similar to Emulex’ and QLogic’ N-Port Virtualization – those two alternatives run on the host bus adapter; Cisco’s NPV runs on a switch or module.


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Contact the author:

Deni Connor is senior editor for Network World magazine covering storage, archiving and compliance, IT in healthcare, Novell and data center-related issues. E-mail Deni.

 



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