Dave:

An even better way for users to play with ONTAP is, of course, to use a "real McCoy" version of ONTAP running on an old NetApp filer head and FC shelf.  

If solely for the purpose of "experimentation" in the support of a production system, would NetApp be hung up on licensing issues?  Thanks.

Regards,

Scott

Scott Fischmann
Union Computer Exchange, Inc.
6233 Idylwood Lane
Minneapolis, MN 55436
email: scott@unioncomputer.com
phone: 952 935 7282 | fax: 952 935 5056

"Helping our customers make each dollar go further -- since 1991!"
    www.unioncomputer.com





<<.....The point of this message is that we are now making the simulator
available to customers so that they can experiment with ONTAP features
and commands without putting production systems at risk. I have had
many customers tell me that they wished they had a way to play with new
releases and new features, but they didn't have a safe place to do it.....>>





Subj:ONTAP Simulator available on NOW
Date:6/18/2003 9:02:24 PM Central Daylight Time
From:hitz@netapp.com
To:toasters@mathworks.com
Sent from the Internet



Some of you may know that NetApp Engineering uses an ONTAP Simulator as
part of our development process.  (The simulator runs all of ONTAP as a
process under Linux. At a very low level, we spoof the disk drivers, so
that disks are simulated by local files. We spoof the network drivers
by putting the Linux Ethernet card into promiscuous mode and creating a
fake MAC address associated with the simulator.)

Enough technical details.

The point of this message is that we are now making the simulator
available to customers so that they can experiment with ONTAP features
and commands without putting production systems at risk. I have had
many customers tell me that they wished they had a way to play with new
releases and new features, but they didn't have a safe place to do it.

Just to be clear:  This is not production software.  It's ONTAP running
on top of Linux, so don't use it for performance testing. We have no
formal support program. Don't call NetApp support. This is an "as is"
tool.  (Some restrictions may apply. :-)

On the other hand, I think you will find the simulator to be very
useful for experimenting with ONTAP. Hundreds of NetApp engineers use
it every day, and we have been using the simulator for over a year in
NetApp training classes. Not only can you experiment with the features
of a single filer, but you can run multiple simulators and experiment
with features like SnapMirror, SnapVault, and Cluster Fail Over.  It
doesn't support Fibre Channel, because that would take more hardware,
but it does support iSCSI and all of the other TCP/IP protocols,
including NFS, CIFS, HTTP and FTP, as well as network management
protocols like SNMP and NDMP.

Here are some details:

    You can download the simulator from NOW at
    <http://now.netapp.com/NOW/cgi-bin/simulator>.

    We have created a category in the NOW community forums called
    "ONTAP Simulator" that can be accessed at
    <http://forums.netapp.com/showcategory.asp?cid=172>.

    And finally, we have created a majordomo mailing list that people
    can join at xdl-simulator@netapp.com.  (You know the drill.  To
    join send to majordomo@netapp.com, not to the simulator list
    itself.)

    And of course, feel free to talk about it here on toasters.

As I said above, the simulator is NOT formally supported, but some
volunteers at NetApp have agreed to informally answer questions to the
xdl-simulator mailing list.

Have fun!

Dave Hitz
Founder and EVP Engineering, Network Appliance