Internet Storage Name Service brings the plug-and-play capabilities of Fibre Channel to IP storage networks. ISNS facilitates automated discovery, management and configuration of iSCSI and Fibre Channel devices on a TCP/IP network. In a Fibre Channel fabric, a simple name server provides these services.
In any storage network, servers (or initiators) need to know which storage resources (or targets) they can access. One way to accomplish
this is for an administrator to configure each initiator manually with its own list of authorized targets and configure each
target with a list of authorized initiators and access controls. But this process is time-consuming and error-prone, and accidentally
configuring multiple servers to access the same storage resources could be disastrous.
An Internet storage name server lets servers automatically identify and connect to authorized storage resources. Letting the
servers dynamically adapt to changing storage resource membership and availability without human intervention results in even
more efficiency.
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Internet Storage Name Service brings the plug-and-play capabilities of Fibre Channel to IP storage networks. ISNS facilitates automated discovery, management and configuration of iSCSI and Fibre Channel devices on a TCP/IP network. In a Fibre Channel fabric, a simple name server provides these services.
In any storage network, servers (or initiators) need to know which storage resources (or targets) they can access. One way to accomplish
this is for an administrator to configure each initiator manually with its own list of authorized targets and configure each
target with a list of authorized initiators and access controls. But this process is time-consuming and error-prone, and accidentally
configuring multiple servers to access the same storage resources could be disastrous.
An Internet storage name server lets servers automatically identify and connect to authorized storage resources. Letting the
servers dynamically adapt to changing storage resource membership and availability without human intervention results in even
more efficiency.
Whereas a Fibre Channel storage name server can handle only Fibre Channel devices, iSNS can accommodate iSCSI devices and
Fibre Channel devices via the Internet Fibre Channel Protocol. End nodes (initiators and targets) in an iSNS environment run a lightweight iSNS client that represents the host device
to the iSNS server.
ISNS provides the following services:
- Name registration and discovery services - Targets and initiators register their attributes and address, and then can obtain information about accessible storage
devices dynamically.
- Discovery domains and logon control service - Resources in a typical storage network are divided into groupings called discovery domains, which can be administered through
network management applications. Discovery domains enhance security by providing access control to targets that are not enabled
with their own access controls, while limiting the logon process of each initiator to a relevant subset of the available targets
in the network.
- State-change notification service - The iSNS server notifies relevant iSNS clients of network events that could affect the operational state of storage nodes.
Events such as storage resources going offline, discovery domain membership changes and link failure in a network can trigger
state-change notifications. These notifications let a network quickly adapt to changes in topology, which is key to scalability
and availability.
- Open mapping of Fibre Channel and iSCSI devices - The iSNS database can store information about Fibre Channel and iSCSI devices and mappings between the two in a multi-protocol
environment. The mapped information is then available to any authorized iSNS client. This centralized approach is open and
scalable instead of retrieving the mappings from individual iSCSI-FC gateways using proprietary mechanisms.
ISNS clients discover the iSNS server or servers using a variety of mechanisms, including Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, Service Location Protocol and broadcast or multicast heartbeat messages. The iSNS framework allows for back-up iSNS servers
that provide redundancy and failover.