About: Fibre Channel is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1287 publications have been published within this topic receiving 26403 citations. The topic is also known as: Fiber Channel & FC.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe a failure involving a controller or controller interface, the virtual disks that are accessed via the affected interfaces are re-mapped to another interface in order to continue to provide high data availability.
Abstract: A fibre channel storage area network (SAN) provides virtualized storage space for a number of servers to a number of virtual disks implemented on various virtual redundant array of inexpensive disks (RAID) devices striped across a plurality of physical disk drives. The SAN includes plural controllers and communication paths to allow for fail-safe and fail-over operation. The plural controllers can be loosely-coupled to provide n-way redundancy and have more than one independent channel for communicating with one another. In the event of a failure involving a controller or controller interface, the virtual disks that are accessed via the affected interfaces are re-mapped to another interface in order to continue to provide high data availability. In particular, a common memory storage device is connected to the back-ends of every controller to provide a storage area. In this manner, the common memory storage device can be accessed via operations similar to those a controller already uses to presently access the physical disks which are connected to the back-end of the controllers.
TL;DR: In this article, a storage router maintains a map to allocate storage space on the remote storage devices to devices connected to the first transport medium by associating representations of the devices connected in the map with representations of storage space.
Abstract: A storage router and method for providing virtual local storage on remote storage devices to devices are provided. Devices are connected to a first transport medium, and a plurality of storage devices are connected to a second transport medium. In one embodiment, the storage router maintains a map to allocate storage space on the remote storage devices to devices connected to the first transport medium by associating representations of the devices connected to the first transport medium with representations of storage space on the remote storage devices, wherein each representation of a device connected to the first transport medium is associated with one or more representations of storage space on the remote storage devices and controls access from the devices connected to the first transport medium to the storage space on the remote storage devices in accordance with the map and using native low level block protocol.
TL;DR: The full treatment of competing approaches of LAN and MAN technologies is included, including complete treatment of standards: IEEE 802 and ANSI standards, specifications from the ATM forum and the Fibre Channel Association, plus TCP/IP.
Abstract: From the Publisher:
Includes the full treatment of competing approaches of LAN and MAN technologies
Details high-speed LANs: Gigabit Ethernet, 100-Mbps token ring, Fibre Channel, and ATM LANs
Covers complete treatment of standards: IEEE 802 and ANSI standards, specifications from the ATM forum and the Fibre Channel Association, plus TCP/IP
Presents structured cabling systems and cabling types
Companion Web site at provides links to important sites, course support for instructors, as well as a link to the Computer Science Student Support Site maintained by the author
TL;DR: In this paper, a method and apparatus for transferring data between IP devices (including, but not limited to, Gigabit Ethernet devices) and SCSI or Fibre Channel devices is presented.
Abstract: A method and apparatus for transferring data between IP devices (including, but not limited to, Gigabit Ethernet devices) and SCSI or Fibre Channel devices. The device interfaces may be either SCSI, Fibre Channel or IP interfaces such as Gigabit Ethernet. Data is switched between SCSI and IP, Fibre Channel and IP, or between SCSI and Fibre Channel. Data can also be switched from SCSI to SCSI, IP to IP and FC to FC. The port interfaces provide the conversion from the input frame format to an internal frame format, which can be routed within the apparatus. The amount of processing performed by each port interface is dependent on the interface type. The processing capabilities of the present invention permit rapid transfer of information packets between multiple interfaces at latency levels meeting the stringent requirements for storage protocols. The configuration control can be applied to each port on a switch and, in turn, each switch on the network, via an SNMP or Web-based interface, providing a flexible, programmable control for the apparatus.
TL;DR: How emerging technology may blur the network-centric distinction between NAS and SAN is about how the decreasing specialization of SAN protocols promises SAN-like devices on Ethernet network hardware.
Abstract: SAN with Fibre Channel network hardware that has a greater effect on a user’s purchasing decisions. This article is about how emerging technology may blur the network-centric distinction between NAS and SAN. For example, the decreasing specialization of SAN protocols promises SAN-like devices on Ethernet network hardware. Alternatively, the increasing specialization of NAS systems may embed much of the file system into storage devices. For users, it is increasingly worthwhile to investigate networked storage core and emerging technologies. Today, bits stored online on magnetic disks are so inexpensive that users are finding new, previously unaffordable, uses for storage. At Dataquest’s Storage2000 conference last June in Orlando, Fla., IBM reported that online disk storage is now significantly cheaper than paper or film, the dominant traditional information storage media. Not surprisingly, users are adding storage capacity at about 100% per year. Moreover, the rapid growth of e-commerce, with its huge global customer base and easy-to-use, online transactions, has introduced new market requirements, including bursty, unpredictable spurts in capacity, that demand vendors minimize the time from a user’s order to installation of new storage. In our increasingly Internet-dependent business and computing environment, network storage is the computer. NETWORK ATTACHED STORAGE ARCHITECTURE