Fibre Channel Protocol (FCP) is the SCSI interface protocol utilizing an underlying Fibre Channel connection. The Fibre Channel Standards (FCS) defines a high-speed data transfer mechanism that can be used to connect workstations, mainframes, supercomputers, storage devices and displays. FCS addresses the need for very fast transfers of large volumes of information and could relieve system manufacturers from the burden of supporting the variety of channels and networks currently in place, as it provides one standard for networking, storage and data transfer.
The key Fibre Channel characters are as follows:
Performance from 266 megabits/second to 16 gigabits/second
Support both optical and copper media, with distances up to 10km.
Small connectors (sfp+ are most common)
High-bandwidth utilization with distance insensitivity
Support for multiple cost/performance levels, from small systems to supercomputers
Ability to carry multiple existing interface command sets, including Internet Protocol (IP), SCSI, IPI, HIPPI-FP, and audio/video.
Fibre Channel Protocol (FCP) is a transport protocol (similar to TCP used in IP networks) that predominantly transports SCSI commands over Fibre Channel networks.
Etymology
When the technology was developed, it supported only optical cabling (fiber); support for copper cables was added later. Despite this the development committee decided to keep the same name but switch to the British English spelling fibre for the standard. In American English spelling fiber refers only to optical cabling. Thus, a network using fibre channel can be implemented either with copper or optical fiber.
... per lane links with�16 channels (eight bidirectional). While protocol agnostic, they support protocols including 10/40/100/400/800 Gbit/s Ethernet, InfiniBand, Fibre Channel, PCIe, CXL and Aurora.