In recent changes that have happened in the storage industry, it makes
me believe that we are nearing an era which may be the end of SAN. If we look
back & contemplate the way SANs were designed they were meant to solve just
one of the many problems that are till today the unsolved problems. The SAN was
originally meant to replace the locally attached storage, which to some extent
has been successfully achieved.
The era of FC SAN was in full flow
until advent of Gigabit & then 10 Gigabit Ethernet came into existence in
around late 2010 decade. The NAS that existed even before SAN came into
existence and continued to remain in the foray, but their age-old file system
protocols were not enough to address the complexities of the mission-critical
enterprise applications that require complex filesystem functionalities &
security that were further made available by the advancing Linux technologies
& the file systems designed on run on them, such as the LFS, ZFS, JFS, DFS,
NTFS, JFFS, HPFS, HDFS, etc.
These required users to move to SAN
to get access to centralized RAW volumes that can be mounted on the
mission-critical application servers to make use of the newer filesystem.
Things changed for SAN manufacturers as the Hard Disk density kept increasing
& the cost of manufacturing kept falling. Today disk made for desktops are
having size of >2TB with comparable performances to match that of the SAN
based disks. So, the fundamental problem of requirement of RAW disk space kept
diminishing over time, while users still continued using the centralized SAN.
The Ethernet technology advanced to
make use of NIC bonding & eventually today has 40GB trunk speed to carry
traffic meant for datacenters & cloud computing applications. This can be
leveraged by the iSCSI SAN solution providers as well as the age old NAS
solution providers to offer greater bandwidth for the hosts and their
underlying applications. The NAS vendors aren’t left behind either. High
performance file system protocols came into existence in the form of NFS V4
& SMB (CIFS) V3 that offered high throughput as well as addressed all the
concerns that existed in the age old NAS filers.
The typical legacy block based RAID
got replaced with file & object based RAID that offers much more
flexibility & availability of data in the event of failures on the
underlying Hard Disk system. Today’s NAS has ability to fine tune itself with
whatever storage is placed in its backend. This only made NAS appliances more
robust as they can offer not only file systems over the network but also the
block based storage such as iSCSI as a unified all-in-one solution.
Software defined storage is further
changing the paradigm for end-users and data-centers. It allows users to
pick-up the hardware of their choice & with any backend storage, be it
SATA, SAS or SSD or a low profile small form factor Flash Cards that can even
be accommodated in the 2U form factor hardware and build their own NAS systems
thus removing the vendor locking for costlier hardware.
All this only leads us to believe, is
it end of era for FC SAN?
Write to us at smm@calsoftinc.com
Contributed
by: Taizun Kanchwala | Calsoft Inc.

