I will verify information with EMC.
Regards, Patrice
-----Original Message-----
From: G D Geen [mailto:geen@msp.sc.ti.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 12, 1999 3:06 PM
To: Toasters Maillist; storage(a)list.ti.com - Share information on
Storage config and prices
Subject: [Fwd: The Promise Of SAN ???.....]
Hi,
I just received this message from Auspex and thought that I would share
it. I do not make any claims to the validity of the message. I only
pass it along so that it may be verified. The writer does not quote the
source, thus I am at first sceptical. Comments and suggestions on ways
to verify are, of course, welcomed.
-gdg
-------- Original Message --------
Just had to put this out as food for thought. As Auspex begins building
SAN gateways we are even more confident the analysts are correct about
the convergence of NAS/SAN. Hope you enjoy.
Kevin Kirksey
Auspex Systems
EMC's Fibre Alliance Woes and the state of SAN Interoperability
On 7/23 Jo Maitland announced in UNIGRAM, that more than half of the
Fibre
Channel switch manufacturers (McData, Brocade, Ancor, Gadzoox and Vixel)
defected from EMC's Fibre Alliance, "fed-up with its slow pace on
standardization". These 5 vendors have created their own, independent
group,
(the Open Standards Fabric Initiative - OSFI) charged with settings
standards of interoperability between their own products and between
their
products and third party products.
Key points:
1. Standards exist for interoperability between switches, and third
party
products, but each vendor was using their own interpretation of those
standards. This led to a lack of interoperability between different
manufacturers switch products and the need for customers to purchase
proprietary SAN solutions - something they are not interested in doing.
This
also led to lack of plug-and-play interoperability between switches and
third party products (such as the HBAs needed in servers to connect to
the
SAN) - in turn forcing vendors of SANs to go through exhaustive
interoperability testing every time a new product revision was released
or a
new product line was added to their suite of SAN products.
2. EMC set up the Fibre Alliance in February with great fanfare,
splitting
off from the SNIA to develop interoperability between components.
Notably
absent from the group were any other storage vendors such as IBM or
Hitachi.
As a result it was seen by many in the industry as a way for EMC to
force
it's own standards on the rest of the Fibre and SAN community. An effort
that has obviously failed - at least for now.
3. Despite the fact that the OSFI has stated that it is a subgroup
within
the FibreAlliance, EMC has stated that they will monitor the group to
see if
their work conflicts with what the Fibre Alliance is doing - in other
words
EMC will do what they're doing, without input or feedback from the OSFI,
leading yet again to dual (and dueling!) standards. An indication of
this is
contained with the report: "One analyst on the call said that working on
device level interoperability is fine but without an overall framework
for
managing those devices, the storage area network is still way off. A
spokesperson for McData, a member of OSFI said, "We have to crawl before
we
can walk." "
4. A third group working on standards is the SNIA (Storage Network
Industry
Association) with over 100 members. A quote from the SNIA and from a
member
of the OSFI sums up the situation with multiple standards committees
working
on the same issues but in opposite directions. SNIA chairman, Roger
Reich,
director of Compaq's network storage division said of the new group: "I
don't know where they are going or what they are doing, but if they need
backing in the form of money or talent we would be happy to speak to
them."
He added that the Fibre Alliance was a closed, profit-making group with
a
different agenda to the SNIA. In response to Reich, Greg Reyes, CEO of
Brocade and a member of the OSFI said: "We are not interested in his
offer."
Summary
1. Despite their protestations to the contrary, EMC is proprietary, will
continue to be proprietary and does not wish to work on a global scale
with
other vendors to open up interoperability of servers, storage devices
and
interconnect products such as switches, hubs and HBAs. Customer
purchasing
EMC storage devices or SAN implementations will be locking themselves
into
the high price leader and into a proprietary solution.
2. This lends further credence to Auspex stated vision (backed up by
analysts) of NAS as the "Intelligent Gateway" to the SAN, and that NAS
should be implemented today with an eye toward tomorrows SAN
implementation
(i.e. SAN should not be implemented today). Install SAN today at your
own
risk, if for no other reason than a lack of standards and a lack of a
current methodology of moving toward a single set of globally accepted
standards.