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TODAY'S TOP SOA & WEBSERVICES LINKS Storage Protocols
Deploying a SAN to Centralize Storage Across the Enterprise
Fighting the cost and complexity of storage
By: Michael McNamara
Sep. 18, 2005 08:15 AM
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Michael McNamara (pictured) writes: The growth of business data continues to explode along with the need to store it. Workers generate more and more e-mail messages and file attachments, users demand instant access to data like never before, IT managers install more storage-hungry applications, and aging paper-based data continues to be converted into digital form. Information growth is so intense, in fact, that spending on data storage is expected to outstrip server spending.
Three options exist today for managing data: Direct Attach Storage (DAS), Network Attach Storage (NAS), and Storage Area Networks (SAN). Direct Attached Storage (DAS) represents the status quo in many organizations that aren't aware of the hidden costs or technology limitations related to this form of implementation:
Network Attached Storage (NAS) is an attractive alternative to general-purpose computers, but has limitations that constrain customer configurations:
Storage Area Networks (SANs) represent a topology for connecting storage assets directly to the network and establishing a peer-to-peer server/storage implementation. SANs have historically been based on Fibre Channel and can now also incorporate iSCSI as a method of server/storage communication. SANs solve multiple issues for large enterprises with data centers and remote facilities and meet the IT requirements of SMB environments. For years adding storage meant buying additional servers, tape libraries, and disk enclosures to attach to the server - a costly and inefficient tactic that left large amounts of storage capacity and computing power unused. Today, SANs - high-speed networks that connect multiple storage devices so they can be accessed on all servers in a local area network (LAN) or wide area network (WAN) - have proven to reduce management costs as a percentage of overall storage costs. Other benefits include:
One way to combat the increasing cost and complexity of storage is to consolidate it in a single pool with fewer storage devices shared among multiple servers. By consolidating storage in a SAN you can:
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