On Thu, 2008-01-31 at 18:40 +0100, Bart Van Assche wrote:I meant small referring to storage on IB fabrics which has usually been in the research and national lab settings, with some other vendors offering IB as an alternative storage fabric for those who [w,c]ould not wait for 10 Gb/sec copper Ethernet and Direct Data Placement to come online. These types of numbers compared to say traditional iSCSI, that is getting used all over the place these days in areas I won't bother listing here. As for the future, I am obviously cheering for IP storage fabrics, in particular 10 Gb/sec Ethernet and Direct Data Placement in concert with iSCSI Extentions for RDMA to give the data center a high performance, low latency transport that can do OS independent storage multiplexing and recovery across multiple independently developed implementions. Also avoiding lock-in from un-interoptable storage transports (espically on the high end) that had plauged so many vendors in years past has become an real option in the past few years with a IETF defined block level storage protocol. We are actually going on four years since RFC-3720 was ratified. (April 2004) Making the 'enterprise' ethernet switching equipment go from millisecond to nanosecond latency in a whole different story that goes beyond my area of expertise. I know there is one startup (Fulcrum Micro) who is working on this problem and seems to be making some good progress. --nab --
