Slashdot Mirror


"iSCSI killer" Native in Linux

jar writes "First came Fibre Channel, then iSCSI. Now, for the increasingly popular idea of using a network to connect storage to servers, there's a third option called ATA over Ethernet (AoE). Upstart Linux developer and kernel contributor Coraid could use AoE shake up networked storage with a significantly less expensive way to do storage -- under $1 per Gigabyte. Linux Journal also has a full description of how AoE works." Note that the LJ article is from last year; the news story is more recent.

2 of 235 comments (clear)

  1. Will it catch on? by andrewman327 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From TFA:
    Some significant caveats mean that not everyone is so keen on the technology. For a start, it's a specification from Coraid, not an industry standard. Its networking abilities are limited. And its detractors include storage heavyweights such as Hewlett-Packard and Network Appliance.


    So will this ever develop into a real standard or will it remain the sole domain of one company? I do not know if I want to invest time and money into it if the latter is true. From a comp sci point of view this is a great approach to networked storage. It uses what people already have to make storage reletively cheap. I am going to wait to see where this technology goes. Maybe it will blossom and become a serious contender.

    --
    Information wants a fueled airplane waiting at the hangar and no one gets hurt.
  2. Not an iSCSI killer, here are the reasons why not by cblack · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1) Complexity for RAID and volume management is not centralized and is pushed to individual hosts. One of the main benefits of SAN technology is that you can just carve out storage from a single interface and assign it to a server and the server simply sees it as a block device. With AoE each drive is addressed separately by the server, which means it is up to the server (and server admin) to figure out how to handle distributing over multiple drives, handle drive failures, and expanding volumes. This is huge.
    2) It is not a standard and is only really supported by one vendor. This may change in the future but it is significant right now. It is registered with the IEEE but that hardly makes it a peer-reviewed standard with input/improvements from many experts.
    3) No boot from SAN. Until someone makes some sort of mini bootstrap system on a CD or a hardware card implementation of AoE that can be addressed as a block device admins will be unable to host the root filesystem and/or C: drive on an AoE SAN
    4) No multipath (that I can see). Perhaps I misunderstand this, but it seems like there is no way to do multipath IO with this system. That is, all the drives are single-connected to a network. If that network switch goes down, all drives on that network are inaccessible.
    So AoE looks like a neat technology for pushing drives out of the box and potentially sharing them among hosts, but there is no intelligence there. It is just dumb block addressable storage with no added availability or management, and therefore is far from being an iSCSI or FC killer.