NETWORK WORLD NEWSLETTER: MIKE KARP ON STORAGE IN THE ENTERPRISE
09/07/04
Today's focus:  Where Serial Attached SCSI gets its high
reliability

Dear [EMAIL PROTECTED],

In this issue:

* Reliability features of Serial Attached SCSI
* Links related to Storage in the Enterprise
* Featured reader resource
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Today's focus:  Where Serial Attached SCSI gets its high 
reliability

By Mike Karp

Serial Attached SCSI drives are fast, robust, and for the most 
part identical to the high-performance devices already in use in 
the enterprise. Not only are they built to the same 
specifications that the current crop of parallel SCSI and Fibre 
Channel drives are, but they also make use of the same SCSI 
command set, have the same form factors and rotate spindle 
speeds.

In short, just about all drive electronics, mechanical 
components and media are the same; the only differences lie in 
the physical connector, a few added features and in the 
protocols at the PHY, link and transport layers.

So other than speed, what's all the noise about? Much of it has 
to do with reliability.

The new generation of SCSI drives comes equipped with two ports 
per drive. Dual porting means added reliability, because now 
devices can be connected to a SCSI initiator (or to different 
initiators) through each port. Two connection points means that 
the major nemesis of high-availability systems - a single point 
of failure - has been eliminated.

Reliability is also enhanced due to better communication on the 
SCSI bus. The signals - both the data and the SCSI commands - 
are now sent serially rather than all at once, which yields 
other improvements that contribute to system reliability.

First, the likelihood that the various signals will interfere 
with one another ("crosstalk"), a major difficulty with any 
parallel data transmission, is essentially eliminated as the 
signals go one at a time.

Crosstalk was the major reason all those wide SCSI ribbon cables 
(or thick differential cables) we all have learned to loathe 
were so cumbersome. Every other wire in the cable was a 
grounding wire, inserted to protect the signals on the wires by 
isolating them from the wires on either side.

Reliability also improves because "signal skew" is eliminated. 
With any parallel data transmission, including parallel SCSI, 
signals must arrive at their destination within a sharply 
defined window (measured in nanoseconds), so timing is king. If 
a pulse arrives too soon or too late, the data get garbled. With 
parallel SCSI, this has meant that cables were cut to very 
precise measurements, and that the maximum distance between a 
SCSI initiator and a target was severely limited.

With serial transmissions, however, timing of the signal flow is 
much less complicated. Data and commands are sent one after the 
other, so the skew issue disappears. Also, because the line 
voltage of Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) is very low compared to 
that of parallel SCSI, the swings from high voltage to low can 
happen much faster. Since the signals themselves turn on and off 
more quickly, more time is available for data transmission.

Finally, because SAS devices use a point-to-point connection 
with their initiators (which is to say, one device per cable), 
disks don't contend with one another for access to the host bus 
adaptor.

Simpler system design, simplified cabling, simple point-to-point 
connections, elimination of crosstalk and signal skew, 
elimination of any single point of failure through dual porting, 
and improved signal integrity all mean more reliable systems, 
higher data availability and better throughput.

So is the choice for you going to be SAS, Serial ATA, or Fibre 
Channel? That comes next time.
_______________________________________________________________
To contact: Mike Karp

Mike Karp is senior analyst with Enterprise Management 
Associates, focusing on storage, storage management and the 
methodology that brings these issues into the marketplace. He 
has spent more than 20 years in storage, systems management and 
telecommunications. Mike can be reached via e-mail 
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
_______________________________________________________________
This newsletter is sponsored by Intel 
A NW Special Report: 
The State of Wireless LANs  

Wireless has becomes more integrated and accepted as a way of 
doing business. However, several questions are raised about its 
current state; what are the trends and best practices for 
deploying wireless LANs?  What are the leading applications? 
What are the tradeoffs in current wireless standards?  What are 
the best options for wireless infrastructures and security 
mechanisms?  Click here to download your copy, no registration 
required http://www.fattail.com/redir/redirect.asp?CID=79108
_______________________________________________________________
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