Oracle is dropping support for CIFS (good thing) but will still support
NFS.
What's wrong with SAN? iSCSI is most certainly SAN and has proven
itself very well in the marketplace as well as being technically very
solid. Similar performance to FCP, fraction of the cost - what's not to
love?
Glenn
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-toasters(a)mathworks.com [mailto:owner-toasters@mathworks.com]
On Behalf Of Michael Bergman
Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2006 2:11 PM
To: johns(a)artesyncp.com
Cc: toasters(a)mathworks.com
Subject: RE: Replacing our NetApp
Derek Lai wrote:
>Is there any reason you kept talking about SANs? SAN has its place,
>especially if you need high end performance. But for a lot of
>applications NAS works just fine.
I agree.
Use NFS. Configure it well.
Build a "storage network" if you like, put in dedicated GbE switch(ws)
(10 GbE?) with the Oracle server(s) and the NAS Filer(s) in it, make
sure everything is Jumbo frames of course, tweak if for optimum
performance as best possible, make sure traffic flows the way it should
a.s.o.
No client traffic on that net.
Use ONTAP 7.x (aggregates) and have enough spindles. Go for the smaller
drives probably, not the 144G's, but the 72's
Most likely this will be Good Enough(TM) so you can stay away from
complicated bug-ridden SAN setups that always are a nightmare to change
config-wise. Especially if you need to change the config quite often in
some way (= more than once a year...)
Just my 0.10 SEK worth
/M
--
Michael Bergman Email:
Michael.Bergman(a)ericsson.com
Sr Systems Analyst
EAB/OET/R, R&D IT Stockholm Phone: +46 8 7275709
R&D IT Management Armborstv 14, S-125 25 Alvsjo,
Sweden
--
"Qui vicit non est victor nisi victus fatetur." - Ennius