Coraid Throws Out Standard SAN for New Age DAS
Progressive storage software maker Coraid has taken the entire
concept of tiered storage-area networks--with all their controllers,
switches, complications and bottlenecks--and has thrown it out the
window.
In its place, Coraid has simplified and optimized enterprise data
storage in a manner akin to the old direct-attached storage (DAS)
scheme. But this isn't your father's DAS; this is DAS, circa the 21st
century.
Coraid's whole mission in life is to solve cost and complexity issues
associated with competing SANs. This is the purpose of its new
solid-state EtherDrive SRX AoE-based (ATA over Ethernet) storage
virtualization appliances, which the Redwood City, Calif.-based company
launched March 1.
AoE presents disk storage to servers across a standard Ethernet network
using Layer 2 connectivity. AoE is a much simpler protocol to process
than iSCSI or Fibre Channel, which rely on much more complicated
protocol stacks and are based upon complex SCSI command sets.
Go here to read a review of Coraid SRX by eWEEK contributor Frank Ohlhorst.
"Our EtherDrive VSX-Series storage virtualization appliances use
commodity hardware and feature logical volume management (LVM),
snapshots, cloning, mirroring and remote replication," Coraid CEO Kevin
Brown (pictured) told eWEEK. "We're growing because our platform really does
deliver radical improvements in price-performance and simplicity."
Coraid, which was founded in 1997, has grown its installed base to more
than 1,300 customers--including many big-time Fortune 100 and large
government customers.
Company Founder Was Mainstay at Cisco Systems
Coraid founder Brantley Coile, who previously invented the Cisco PIX
firewall and Cisco LocalDirector products, developed the AoE networked storage protocol starting in 2000 and
released it to the open-source community in 2003.
AoE is a simple way to move disk storage out of servers and onto an
Ethernet storage network. With AoE, disk read/write requests are placed
directly into Ethernet frames/packets. AoE packets don't need TCP/IP, so
they are easy to process.
AoE has been included in the Linux operating system kernel since 2005.
Typically, eight-port enterprise SANs are made up of proprietary hardware
and software that is difficult to change up without a lot of cost and
effort, especially when major upgrades and fixes need to be made.
"You could afford to have somebody come in, get it up and running, and
monkey with it once in a while. It's not particularly dynamic. However,
when you need a new one, in comes the forklift," Brown said.
"With our system, you keep the same software all the time and get 10 times or
20 times performance improvements--sometimes better than that, depending
on the workload--and you just add more disks as you grow. Works with
all operating systems and protocols. Can't get much easier to use than
that."
Access by Any Computer on the Network
EtherDrive storage can be accessed and shared by any server/host
computer attached to the storage network, Brown said. Disks inside
EtherDrive storage appliances are usually assembled into RAID volumes
and presented as block storage LUNs.
Servers discover and mount EtherDrive LUNs by using a low-cost Host Bus
Adapter (HBA) and software driver. The HBA driver presents an EtherDrive
LUN, to the host OS, as a local SCSI disk drive, Brown said.
The SRX3200 series of EtherDrive storage appliances from Coraid--which
include a load of fast NAND flash drives--are offered as
high-performance SAN-like devices that really act more like DAS devices.
They are designed to work with 3.5-inch or 2.5-inch SAS
(serial-attached SCSI), SATA (serial ATA) or SSD (solid-state drive)
disks, Brown said.
All the SRXs utilize four 10-GigE (Gigabit Ethernet) connections,
enabling high-performance access for virtualization, cloud and
primary-storage applications, Brown said.
Coraid's SRX software is priced at about $500 per terabyte and scales to multiple petabytes, Brown said.
