Converged Networks and Fibre Channel over Ethernet

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more connections for increased performance. Smaller servers, especially blade servers, have few option slots, and the
Fibre Channel host bus adapters (HBAs) add noticeably to server cost. Therefore FCoE is a compelling choice for the first
network hop in such servers.
HP ProLiant BL G7 and Gen8 blade servers have embedded CNAs, called FlexFabric adapters, which eliminate some
hardware costs associated with separate network fabrics. Dual-port, multifunction FlexFabric adapters are both
Ethernet and host bus adapters, depending on user configuration. These embedded CNA adapters leave the
BladeSystem PCIe mezzanine card slots available for additional storage or data connections.
Direct-attach storage
While Direct Attached Storage (DAS) does not offer an alternative to converged networking, it’s important to
acknowledge that a great deal of the storage sold today is DAS and that will continue to be the case. HP Virtual Connect
direct-attach Fibre Channel for 3PAR Storage Solutions with Flat SAN technology can be a significant way to more
effectively use the single hop FCoE already deployed within existing network infrastructures. See the “
Using HP Flat SAN
technology to enhance single hop FCoE” section later in this paper to learn more.
Storage Area Network
Fibre channel is the storage fabric of choice for most enterprise IT infrastructures. Until now, Fibre channel required an
intermediate SAN fabric to create your storage solution. However, this fabric can be expensive and complex. Converged
networks using FCoE have the potential to change these requirements in a way that lowers costs and complexity in the
IT infrastructure.
iSCSI: SANs using TCP/IP networks
iSCSI infrastructures further demonstrates the desirability of network convergence with respect to cost savings. Two
common deployments are the end-to-end iSCSI solution, typically found in entry to midrange network environments,
and iSCSI frontends to Fibre Channel storage in large enterprise environments. In the latter scenario, the FCoE benefit is
that, from server and SAN perspective, it’s all Fibre Channel traffic and doesn’t go through translation. The FCoE solution
means less overhead and easier debugging, resulting in significant cost savings.
Cluster interconnects
Cluster interconnects are special networks designed to provide low latency (and sometimes high bandwidth) for
communication between pieces of an application running on two or more servers. The way application software sends
and receives messages typically contributes more to the latency than a small network fabric. As a result, engineering of
the end-to-end path is more important than the design detail of a particular switch ASIC. Cluster interconnects are used
in supercomputers and historically have been important to the performance of parallel databases. More recently,
trading applications in the financial services industry and other high-performance computing (HPC) applications have
made extensive use of InfiniBand. Over the next few years, 10 and 40 Gigabit DCB Ethernet will become more common
and less expensive. RoCEE NICs (NICs supporting InfiniBand-like interfaces) also will become available. As a result, half
of the current cluster interconnect applications may revert to Ethernet, leaving only the most performance sensitive
supercomputers and applications to continue running separate cluster networks.
Approaches to converged data center networks
As the industry continues its efforts to converge data center networks, various engineering tradeoffs become necessary.
Different approaches may in fact be better for different environments, but in the end the industry needs to focus on a
single approach to best serve its customers. Table 1 examines how current protocol candidates compare for converging
data center networks in different network environments.