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 Advantages of SAN over local disk

Author  Topic 

Jim Beam
Posting Yak Master

137 Posts

Posted - 2011-01-05 : 12:37:05
Hi all,

Firstly, am I right in thinking that a SAN is, as the acronym implies, simply an array of disks, but on a different network?

Secondly, in the same we we'd want lots of spindles in a RAID, what considerations would we need to take when choosing a SAN (apart from vendors being a bunch of crooks!) ??

Cheers,

Jim.

Kristen
Test

22859 Posts

Posted - 2011-01-05 : 12:43:50
here's my understanding:

SAN is a bunch of disk (can contain a set of RAID5 and another set of RAID10, or whatever).

It is linked to a server by a high speed network card, so in effect the server "writes" to its disks across a dedicated network. I suppose that isn't much different to using a Disk Controller.

Two machines can share the same disks within a SAN. So Server-1 and Server-2 could share LogicalDrive-A and LogicalDrive-B. if Server-1 failed then Server-2 could be activated, and it would have the latest-copy of all data on the disk.

That's what we use it for anyway, a hot failover server for when Server-1 breaks.
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russell
Pyro-ma-ni-yak

5072 Posts

Posted - 2011-01-05 : 12:45:24
SAN = Storage Area Network.

Lives on the same network as the servers you attach to it.

There are many reasons to use SAN storage including:
- high performance
- large data footprint
- ease of management
- dynamic space allocation
- thin provisioning
- deduplication technologies
some SANs come with tools for
- change capture
- instant creation of mirrors
- block level SAN to SAN sysnchronization
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