Extending San Connectivity For Engenio Arrays: Sanbox 6142 Intelligent Storage Router
Extending San Connectivity For Engenio Arrays: Sanbox 6142 Intelligent Storage Router
Extending San Connectivity For Engenio Arrays: Sanbox 6142 Intelligent Storage Router
Executive Summary
The storage industry provides an abundance of white papers
that discuss the ever-changing data management and retention
regulations, the need for business continuity, and disaster
recovery. They propose solutions that meet these and other
business and regulatory needs, including:
Business continuity data replication for local and disaster
recovery (DR) protection
Flexible IT operations information distribution & application
development
Bridging multi-vendor SANs due to mergers & acquisitions
Improving application availability globally
Growing regional regulations related to data protection and
retention
The core of these data services is the ability to copy, move, and
replicate data, both locally and far away. Unfortunately, SANs only
reach about 10km. IT managers need to share, protect, and move
data much farther than that. Routers and switches linking SANs
over WANs are the technology of the moment to help IT managers
protect valuable data over long distances to support business
continuity with migration and replication, to consolidate islands
of SANs, and to improve the usage of WAN and SAN resources.
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1. The initiating system issues a write request to the remote system: 50ms delay
2. The remote system responds with a Ready status: 50ms delay
3. The initiating system sends the first block of 32KB data: 50ms delay
4. The remote system issues a transfer ready status: 50ms delay
5. The initiating system sends the second block of 32KB data: 50ms delay
6. The requesting system confirms that the transfer is complete: 50ms delay
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WAN Latency
Transfer Data
The primary cause of WAN latency is the distance that the light
beam, used as a signal, has to travel between the source and the
destination locations. The rule is that 100 miles of distance has a
1ms (millisecond) delay. So, a replication solution connected over
1000 miles has a 10ms one-way latency and a 20ms Round Trip
Time (RTT). Since, in most WAN communications, one device sends a
command/data transmission and the other device returns a response/
acknowledgement, RTT is the most common method of quoting WAN
latencies. The following chart shows the expected one-way latencies
at specific distances.
Size of File
64 MB
64 KB
20ms
70ms
Number of Transfers
1024
2048
184
You can see that the 64MB file, broken into 64KB transfers, requires
1,024 write operations. Assuming a WAN latency of 70ms and a
network infrastructure latency of 10ms at each end, you have a 90ms
total for each write instruction and for each of the acknowledgements.
The total latency time is 184 seconds, or three minutes to transfer the
file regardless of the speed of the WAN line itself. The second primary
factor in WAN performance is the line speed of the WAN connection.
IP over WAN
250
Latency in Milliseconds
200
150
100
50
KM
09
3
KM
16
,
0
10
,0
0
M
0
00
9,
ile
s
ile
s
12
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14
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84
75
KM
KM
ile
s
M
0
00
8,
0
00
7,
0
00
6,
ile
ile
s
ile
s
8,
9,
65
04
11
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65
KM
KM
7
KM
M
5,
00
M
0
00
4,
3,
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ile
s
ile
s
6,
4,
82
8
43
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KM
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3,
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ile
2,
00
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0
1,
00
10
0
ile
s
ile
1,
60
9
16
1
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KM
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WAN Lines
Mbps
MB/S
Price/Month
Cable
3.0
0.4
$50
T1
1.5
0.2
$500
T3
45.0
5.6
$4,000
OC 3
155.0
19.4
$20,000
OC 12
622.0
77.8
$75,000
OC 48
2,400.0
300.0
$150,000
OC 192
10,000.0
1,250.0
$250,000
250.00
200.00
150.00
100.00
50.00
0.00
WAN Latency
T3
OC3
OC12
OC 48
OC192
5.33
194.96
60.39
19.05
8.89
6.19
5.3
5.3
5.3
5.3
5.3
5.3
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SmartWrite:
1. A SAN application issues a command to send an FC packet to an FC target over SmartWrite Layer 3 SCSI routing.
2. SmartWrite intelligently:
a. Determines the total wire transfers to reduce WAN latency
b. Compresses the data to improve WAN line speed
c. Leverages load balancing to minimize transfer time over multiple lines (if available)
3. SmartWrite converts the FC packet to an iSCSI packet and routes the data without merging the SAN fabrics.
4. SmartWrite sends multiple transfers in one process, reducing WAN latency.
5. SmartWrite delivers the FC packets to the target device.
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First, SmartWrite can detect the total transfer size to go over the
WAN. This enables SmartWrite to tell the receiving router how many
transfers to expect over the WAN. For example, a source router
(located in New York) can tell the destination (located in London) that
it will receive a write, as well as how many transfers it will receive to
complete the file. This enables SmartWrite to send data in a constant
stream from the source to the destination without having to wait
for individual acknowledgements for each write. This dramatically
reduces the latency of the transfer, increasing line usage for data
transfer, which can reduce WAN line costs.
Second, SmartWrite can compress the data before transferring
it, which reduces the volume of transferred data. This reduces the
number of transfers required to move the data, reducing the transfer
time and lowering WAN costs.
SANbox 6142
SANbox 6142
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This table shows three vital numbers for making the router/gateway
versus director/switch blade decision:
Two-Site Cost of Routing To create a high-availability
configuration, two routers need to be placed within each location
(four total). This greatly impacts the capital investment of directors
and switches. The amortized cost of the embedded routing solution
sacrifices some very dear resources that could be better used for
their primary switching functions. In many cases, the capital cost
of the stand-alone router model represents a 60% saving over the
HA switch model and over an 80% cost savings compared to the
director class model.
Opportunity Cost Factor The opportunity cost of using one
of the precious blade slots on a director or switch adds to the
capital cost of the equipment. Each of those slots represents an
opportunity cost of over $20,000. The router model for linking
SANs over WANs does not require this type of opportunity tradeoff.
Price per IP Routing Port Since the number of IP ports and line
latency are the primary drivers of performance, the other key cost
metric is the price per IP routing port. In each of these products,
the base model router provides two ports. Two routers provide four
router ports on each end for a stronger ROI and lower capital cost
with no opportunity cost versus the HA switch or director model.
SANbox 6142
Brocade 7500*
Cisco 9216i*
Cisco 9506*
$12,999
$42,322
$55,000
$134,000
--
$18,333
$26,800
Opportunity Cost/Slot
--
$23,333
$35,200
Base Unit
$6,500
$21,161
$27,500
$67,000
$25,998
$84,644
--
--
Chassis Costs
--
$55,000
$134,000
Blade Costs
--
--
$20,000
S F Ps
--
--
$3,500
$15,350
$15,000
$15,000
Management Software
$2,700
$3,500
$3,500
$102,694
$165,166
$313,300
$51,996
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SANbox 6142
SANbox 6142
SANbox 6142
SANbox 6142
However, in many cases, mission-critical functions require a fullyredundant, high-availability architecture. This is typically the case
when the business has very small recovery time objectives (RTO) or
very recent recovery point objective (RPO). The mantra of no single
point of failure holds true in this situation. To guarantee a successful
RPO/RTO scenario, a dual path must be implemented from the fabrics
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For each set of volumes that comprise a mirror pair, RVM supports
a variety of replication options to provide you with the flexibility to
optimize data protection and utilization.
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overhead
for
SAN
over
WAN
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Disclaimer
Reasonable efforts have been made to ensure the validity and accuracy of these comparative performance tests. QLogic Corporation is not
liable for any error in this published white paper or the results thereof. Variation in results may be a result of change in configuration or in
the environment. QLogic specifically disclaims any warranty, expressed or implied, relating to the test results and their accuracy, analysis,
completeness or quality. All brand and product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies.
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