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Storage Area Network (SAN) Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala
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Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

Storage Area Network(SAN)

Presenters:Arun Kumar Kamepally

Udaya Tummala

Page 2: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

Contents

Introduction

RAID

SAN definition

SAN Environment

SAN components

SAN topologies

Difference between NAS,DAS,SAN

SAN management

Page 3: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

Introduction

Data has became more important and technology has become obsolete to handle huge data.

Traditionally local storage devices are used to store data. Later storing data centrally and making it available has become cost effective to handle data.

Network storage is simply about storing data using a method by which it can be made available to clients on the network.

Different Storage technology DAS NAS SAN

Page 4: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

Storages RAID: RAID is a method used to inexpensively put together a set of physical hard drives into a logical

array of storage devices. RAID provides fault tolerance compared to standalone disk drives. RAID does this by mirroring data or implementing parity check operations. RAID can be performed using hardware or host based software. Several types of RAID can be used, including one or more of these

RAID 0 (striping)

RAID 1 (mirroring)

RAID 3 (error detection)

RAID 5 (error correction)

Page 5: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

Definition A SAN is a High- speed Special Purpose Network that interconnects different kinds of data storage devices with

data servers.

Hubs, switches and bridges are used for connecting to different devices.

SAN is very expensive only big businesses can afford it.

Page 6: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

SAN is a Network that transfer data between storage devices like disk array and servers.

SAN work same as Server in different way.

Data is stored in Disk Array.

SAN is useful for getting server backup

SAN is a set of protocols and technologies that permit storage devices to have direct connections with

servers over some distance.

In addition, a SAN permits the storage devices to be shared among a number of servers based on select

criteria. VSAN technologies, a group of discrete SANs can be connected together using a “ virtual “ SAN

fabric.

Page 7: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.
Page 8: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

What makes SAN?

Storage Devices

High Speed Connectivity

SAN Management

SAN Software

Page 9: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

Continue…….

A SAN can be used to bypass traditional network bottlenecks. It supports direct, high speed data transfers between servers and storage devices in the following three ways:

Server to storage:

This is the traditional model of interaction with storage devices. The advantage is that the same storage device may be accessed serially or concurrently by multiple servers.

Server to server:

A SAN may be used for high-speed, high-volume communications between servers.

Storage to storage:

This outboard data movement capability enables data to be moved without server intervention, thereby freeing up server processor cycles for other activities like application processing.

Page 10: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

Technologies in SAN:

Multiple technology can be used when building a SAN; traditionally the dominant technology is Fiber Channel, but Ip based solutions are also quite popular for specific applications.

The concept of SAN is also independent from the devices that are attached to it. Can be disks, tapes, RAIDs, file servers or other.

Hubs, switches and bridges are used for connecting to different devices.

Page 11: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

SAN components

Fibre Channel Network:

A high performance (200 MB/sec) redundant network made up of fibre channel switches for deploying and sharing enterprise resources.

Host Bus Adapter (HBA):

PCI adaptor connects a server to the SAN fabric. Each HBA installed is referred to as a host.

Enterprise Storage:

Any storage device with FC interface that is interoperable with the switches, HBAs, servers and server operating systems in the network

Page 12: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

SAN Advantages:

SAN Architecture facilitates scalability. Storage devices can be added to store hundreds of terabytes.

Sharing SAN is possible. SAN is not directly attached with any particular server or network, SAN can be shared by all.

SAN provides long distance connectivity.

SAN is truly versatile. A SAN can be single entity , a master grouping of several SANs.

Page 13: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

SAN,NAS,DAS

SAN is a block device which is delivered over the network.Like DAS you must still place a file system upon it before it can used.Technologies to do this include Fibre Channel, iSCSI, FoE, etc.

NAS is a file system delivered over the network. It is ready to mount and use.Technologies to do this include NFS, CIFS, AFS, etc.

DAS is a block device from a disk which is physically [directly] attached to the host machine.You must place a file system upon it before it can be used.Technologies to do this include IDE, SCSI, SATA, etc.

Page 14: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

Supported topologies by SANPoint to pointArbitrated loopSwitched Fabric

Point to point:Point to point is the simplest topology with lited connectivity needs It guarantees in delivery and full bandwidth access.Application can handle any multipath connectivity to a set of disks in case this is provided, since

no other elements are present in this topology.

Page 15: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

Arbitrated loop: Designed to scale to a limited number of nodes. Low cost Arbitration protocols designed to manage media sharing across nodes

may be disruptive when a node gets added/ removed from loop and loop

initialization protocol kicks in A arbitrating hub can be used instead of a distributed protocol

Switched Fabric: In this switching element get added to allow interconnections via point to point links. Extended number of devices and greater distances can be achieved Scalable, robust and reliable architecture.

Page 16: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

SAN management

i. Storage level : is comprised of the storage devices that integrate the SAN, such as disks, disk arrays,

tapes, and tape libraries.

ii. Network level: is comprised by all the components that provide connectivity, such as cables, switches,

inter-switch links, gateways, routers.

iii. Enterprise Level: comprises all devices and components present in a SAN environment, as well as the

workstations indirectly connected to it

Page 17: Presenters: Arun Kumar Kamepally Udaya Tummala. Contents Introduction RAID SAN definition SAN Environment SAN components SAN topologies Difference between.

References

[1] Rabe, Bruce R., Mark Clifford, and Norm Miles. "Storage area network (SAN) management system for discovering SAN components using a SAN management server." U.S. Patent No. 7,194,538. 20 Mar. 2007.

[2] Sacks, David. "Demystifying Storage Networking DAS, SAN, NAS, NAS Gateways, Fibre Channel, and iSCSI." Published by IBM storage networking(2001).

[3] Clark, Tom. Designing Storage Area Networks: A Practical Reference for Implementing Storage Area Networks. Addison-Wesley Longman Publishing Co., Inc., 2003.[4] Khattar, Ravi Kumar, et al. Introduction to Storage Area Network, SAN. IBM Corporation, International Technical Support Organization, 1999.

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