Intel Announces Open Fibre Channel Over Ethernet
sofar writes "Intel has just announced and released source code for their Open-FCoE project, which creates a transport allowing native Fibre Channel frames to travel over ordinary ethernet cables to any Linux system. This extremely interesting development will mean that data centers can lower costs and maintenance by reducing the amount of Fibre Channel equipment and cabling while still enjoying its benefits and performance. The new standard is backed by Cisco, Sun, IBM, EMC, Emulex, and a variety of others working in the storage field. The timing of this announcement comes as no surprise given the uptake of 10-Gb Ethernet in the data center."
That's not Age of Empires, but ATA over Ethernet, a lightweight protocol which would be great for network booting Windows. Does anyone know of a free AoE initiator for Windows XP? The etherboot project already has AoE capability in its gPXE stack: http://www.etherboot.org/
As we have seen with iSCSI the bandwidth capability over Ethernet just is not there. I with the EMC this will probably be great for the low end company that needs a mid tier and low tier environment. However large corporations with large database and high number of systems still need to stay with fibre frabrics. This probably will be only on the mid tier platforms like clariion.
Linux is like a teepee. It has no windows, no gates, and there's an Apache inside.
I have an account that I support that has completely saturated 4 4G ISL's in-between 2 Brocade 48k's, and had to re-balance their fibre. Granted, and individual HBA doesn't hit a sustained 2G/sec, but 16G/sec saturated to a pair of HDS Thunders is impressive.
Mostly, I think this technology will compete against iSCSI, not dedicated fibre, with all the drawbacks -- plus an added drawback of currently being single-platform.
For that type of project, look to the hedge fund community. I know of 2 hedge funds that have built their own storage systems that way - Ethernet, Linux, direct attached disk, and a lot of custom code. My world doesn't allow me to get into the details, so I can't elaborate. My only point is that their are folks doing this and it tends to be the guys with large storage needs, moderate budgets, and a great deal of freedom from corporate standards and vendor influence.
My only point is that their are folks doing this and it tends to be the guys with large storage needs, moderate budgets, and a great deal of freedom from corporate standards and vendor influence.
Stay with them, these are good environments. BTW, I am not anti-standards, but at the end of the day they need to make sense. That is, not a standard for pure political posturing.