Storage Networking Protocol Fundamentals

Front Cover
Cisco Press, May 30, 2013 - Computers - 552 pages

A comparative analysis of Ethernet, TCP/IP, and Fibre Channel in the context of SCSI

  • Introduces network administrators to the requirements of storage protocols
  • Explains the operation of network protocols to storage administrators
  • Compares and contrasts the functionality of Ethernet, TCP/IP, and Fibre Channel
  • Documents the details of the major protocol suites, explains how they operate, and identifies common misunderstandings
  • References the original standards and specifications so you can get a complete understanding of each protocol
  • Helps you understand the implications of network design choices
  • Discusses advanced network functionality such as QoS, security, management, and protocol analysis

Corporations increasingly depend on computer and communication technologies to remain competitive in the global economy. Customer relationship management, enterprise resource planning, and e-mail are a few of the many applications that generate new data every day. Effectively storing, managing, and accessing that data is a primary business challenge in the information age. Storage networking is a crucial component of the solution to meet that challenge.

Written for both storage administrators who need to learn more about networking and network administrators who need to learn more about storage, Storage Networking Protocol Fundamentals is a concise introduction to storage networking protocols. The book picks up where Storage Networking Fundamentals left off by focusing on the networking protocols that underlie modern open systems: block-oriented storage networks.

The first part of the book introduces you to the field of storage networking and the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) reference model. The second part compares networked storage technologies, including iSCSI (Small Computer Systems Interface over IP) and Fibre Channel. It also examines in detail each of the major protocol suites layer-by-layer within the OSI reference model. The third part discusses advanced functionalities of these technologies, such as quality of service (QoS), load-balancing functions, security, management, and protocol analysis. You can read this book cover to cover or use it as a reference, directly accessing the particular topics of interest to you.

“Storage networking is a critical concept for today’s businesses, and this book provides a unique and helpful way to better understand it. Storage networking is also continuously evolving, and as such this book may be seen as an introduction to the information technology infrastructures of the future.”

—from the foreword by Claudio DeSanti, vice-chairman of the ANSI INCITS T11 Technical Committee

 

Contents

Overview of Storage Networking
5
Chapter
12
ESCON and FICON
17
NDMP and EXTENDED COPY
23
417
27
Host Storage Subsystem
32
OSI Reference Model Versus Other Network Models
39
SCSI Bus Interface and the ANSI T10 SCSI3 Architecture Model
45
Fibre Channel
236
Summary
242
OSI Session Presentation and Application Layers
245
FCP Operational Details
293
FCIP Operational Details
324
Summary
346
Advanced Network Functionality
349
IP Flow Control and QoS
356

Summary
52
Overview of Network Operating Principles
55
Fibre Channel
84
Summary
90
Overview of Modern SCSI Networking Protocols
93
FCP
97
Summary
105
OSI Physical and DataLink Layers
109
SCSI Parallel Interface
126
Fibre Channel
150
OSI Network Layer
193
OSI Transport Layer
217
Routing and Switching Protocols
367
Load Balancing
377
Storage Network Security
385
Storage Management Protocols
395
Protocol Decoding and Traffic Analysis
405
Appendixes
417
Standards and Specifications
419
Acronyms and Abbreviations
441
Answers to Review Questions
463
Glossary
479
Index
499
Copyright

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About the author (2013)

James Long is a storage networking systems engineer for Cisco Systems, Inc., where he specializes in field sales organization. James has more than 16 years of IT experience spanning server administration, database administration, software development, multiprotocol network design and administration, remote access solutions design and administration, IP telephony and IP contact center design, content distribution design, storage network design, and advanced technology evaluation. James holds numerous technical certifications from Cisco®, Microsoft, Novell, the Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA), and the Computing Technology Industry Association (CompTIA).

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