Storage technology clears key hurdle

, CNET News.com
Friday, September 06, 2002 11:13 AM
A technology that promises to bridge the worlds of data storage and networking has passed a key point on its path to becoming a usable standard.

The Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA) subgroup that led the creation of the technology, called iSCSI, has completed a final round of comments on the technology, the group said Wednesday.

As a result, companies now can start building iSCSI products. Only minor changes are required before the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) endorses iSCSI as a formal version 1.0 standard.

SCSI is a widely used standard for connecting hard drives to computers; iSCSI lets that happen over a network connection such as a company Ethernet network or even the Internet. iSCSI holds the promise of letting multiple computers tap into a pool of storage systems.

iSCSI's main competitor is an existing technology called Fibre Channel, which is expensive and considered complicated, yet faster and better established than iSCSI. The new technology, though, can use existing computer networks where Fibre Channel requires separate equipment.

Fibre Channel is largely the purview of specialist companies such as Brocade Communications, while iSCSI piggybacks on the networking expertise and technology of mainstream companies.

Cisco Systems and IBM are among the biggest backers of iSCSI and have worked hard to develop it. The companies have even begun shipping products with early versions of iSCSI.

One of the hurdles for the technology's adoption was the IETF's requirement that iSCSI include support for a technology called IPsec, which permits encrypted communications. IPsec support threw a wrench in the works of companies such as Adaptec that planned to build special-purpose microprocessors that speed up the communications that underlie iSCSI.

"iSCSI chipsets will eventually include support for IPsec in them," said Doug Ingraham, senior manager for Cisco's SN 5400 line of iSCSI storage switches. In the meantime, Cisco will support iSCSI's IPsec by packaging it with a separate networking system, he said.

Some others are supporting the IPsec with software, a route that is sluggish compared to special-purpose chips, but not necessarily that big a problem because customers aren't clamoring for IPsec at this point, Ingraham added.

Cisco recently began including Fibre Channel communication capabilities in its SN 5428 iSCSI switch. In August, Cisco introduced its MDS 9000 switch, a higher-end system that supports dozens of iSCSI and Fibre Channel ports.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

Hands-on programming: Extract plain text from documents with Syncfusion's components

Web Development

Justin James recently tried Syncfusion's Essential DocIO and Essential PDF to help him extract text from documents he downloaded from the Internet. Here's the code he wrote to get the plain text.


Read more »



Will technology divide us further?

Blog thumbnail

So I finally watched 2012 over the weekend, but the film left me feeling extremely agitated.

The possibility that the world may meet its watery end in three years didn't..... by Eileen Yu

Read more »

Tags

  1. battery
  2. camera
  3. graphics
  4. hard drive
  5. hewlett - packard co.
  6. high tech computer corp.
  7. intel corp.
  8. keyboard
  9. microsoft windows
  10. microsoft windows mobile
  11. mobile
  12. network
  13. notebook
  14. performance
  15. screen
  16. server
  17. storage
  18. touchpad
  19. usb
  20. vat