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Fibre Channel is the king of enterprise storage-area-network technologies. It's fast, it can handle long distances, and it's got strong vendor support.
ISCSI, however, is the heir apparent. When it comes to new SANs, add-ons to existing systems or departmental-level installations at large enterprises that have Fibre Channel, customers increasingly are choosing iSCSI.
Check out our survey on iSCSI SAN customer satisfaction
And when iSCSI over 10 Gigabit Ethernet comes online, the biggest remaining hurdle to adopting iSCSI storage -- its perceived slow performance -- will fall. At that point, iSCSI will become the storage interconnection transport of choice across the enterprise.
How soon until that happens? Analysts expect support for 10G Ethernet will be built into enterprise storage arrays and servers within the next three years. This means IT executives need to start learning about iSCSI now, begin asking their storage vendors about their iSCSI road maps and begin planning for an orderly migration to iSCSI.
There are four reasons for the ascendance of iSCSI:
Cost. An iSCSI storage solution running on familiar Ethernet infrastructure costs a fraction of a high-end Fibre Channel solution in terms of the technology and the expertise needed to run it, IT experts say.
Staffing. Finding good Fibre Channel talent can be a challenge, and the scarcity drives up the cost. "It's hard to hire people with Fibre Channel expertise," says Andrew Reichman, an analyst with Forrester Research.
Compliance mandates. The growing list of industry and government mandates about the handling of data -- Sarbanes-Oxley, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, credit card regulations -- is driving companies to think out their storage and archiving policies carefully. The need to digitize documents, from simple forms to X-rays, likewise motivates companies to get their storage houses in order as inexpensively as possible without sacrificing utility and reliability.
Virtualization. "Server virtualization is a big driver," says John Sloane, analyst with Info-Tech Research Group. Many midsize companies that may not have invested in network storage because of cost now look to consolidate more of their Windows and x86 architecture with VMware. "To get the best benefit from VMware [for] disaster recovery, high availability and advanced data protection, you're really driven toward putting the virtual-machine files and data on a SAN," he says.
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Comments (21)
RE: Is Fibre Channel dead?By Anonymous on March 15, 2007, 10:03 amWe want to hear from YOU! Participate in our poll and share your thoughts below. Polls - Take Our Poll Fibre Channel might be a dead end, at least for...
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Oh, really?By Anonymous on March 15, 2007, 12:29 pmWho the heck is Joel Snyder, and why should I believe what he says? This guy comes off sounding awfully ignorant; spouting all the benefits of iSCSI, while ignoring...
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FC x ISCSIBy Alberto on March 15, 2007, 1:47 pmFrom the tech point of view, FC is better than iSCSI, since it was designed as DAS from scratch. Ethernet was designed for communication for packets 1500B long at...
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At 1G, iscsi is "free" givenBy Anonymous on March 16, 2007, 10:06 pmAt 1G, iscsi is "free" given MS's sw initiators. I doubt that sw-only will work at 10G speeds... then the question is when will 10G HBA prices reach commodity levels?...
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what about the costs of the switching infrastructure?By Anonymous on March 19, 2007, 10:28 amAll the talk around the initiators and targets, what I don't see is talk around the costs of a network that compares a standard FC network and a "i-scsi" network....
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I think Joel needs to cutBy Darin on March 19, 2007, 10:34 am I think Joel needs to cut down his caffeine intake. He is starting to hallucinate. I love these so-called industry experts that SPEW a particular technology,...
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