A storage area network is typically assembled using three principle components: cabling, host bus adapters (HBAs) and switches. Cabling is the physical medium used to interconnect every SAN device. SANs can use both copper and optical fiber cabling, though the choice of medium depends on the speed and distance requirements of the SAN. Slower or shorter distance connections can be made through copper cables, while faster or longer distance connections are achieved through optical cables. Optical
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Each server or storage device in a storage area network fabric requires an HBA. The HBA can exist as either an expansion card that fits into a compatible expansion slot in a server, or it may be a chip integrated directly into the server or storage device. An HBA typically offloads data storage and retrieval overhead from the local processor, improving the server's performance. Cabling is used to connect the HBA's port to a corresponding port on a switch.
A switch is used to handle and direct traffic between network devices. The switch accepts traffic, and then relays the traffic to the port where the intended destination device is attached. In a SAN, each storage server and storage device connects to a switch port. The switch then relays traffic to and from specific devices across the SAN -- this series of switched interconnections form the SAN "fabric," which can easily be scaled or changed. An intelligent switch serves the same basic functions but incorporates high-level SAN features like storage virtualization, quality of service , remote mirroring, data sharing, protocol conversion and security.
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This tip originally appeared on SearchStorage.com.
This was first published in November 2006